The Italian bike is being run by the Hertrampf Racing Endurance Team from Germany
Small winglets on the new CBR1000RR will deploy at speed for better aerodynamics
Ducati delivers its state-of-art WSBK-spec racer for the road to two Indian customers
We have compiled a list of the top five two-wheeler news stories that grabbed headlines this week
The German marque’s flagship road-legal track tamer costs Rs 18.5 lakh (ex-showroom India)
The pre-production model of the 1103cc V4-powered hyper naked will debut at this year’s Pikes Peak Hill Climb
The new-gen bike appears to sport V4-inspired bodywork
The second-gen e-bike gets a higher top speed and lots of carbon fibre
The latest iteration of Kawasaki’s litre-class offering gets a small power bump and loads of new features!
Someone paid a whopping Rs 45 lakh for chassis 001 of the Jawa in a recent auction! Here’s what else you can get for that sort of money
The Bavarian bikemaker has confirmed the all-new litre-class bike for India
Have you been waiting for a naked V4-powered Ducati? Happen to have a lot of money around? We have something for you
Ducati to hold owners’ race meet in the month of October
Ducati has plans to release close to 29 models over the next five years
The homologation special of the Panigale V4 produces 220PS, making it the most powerful naturally aspirated road-legal motorcycle
New models include Ducati Panigale V4 R, Hypermotard and more!
Latest Ducati flagship becomes second most powerful motorcycle after the Kawasaki Ninja H2!
Here are all the major events that unfolded over the last week in the motorcycling world, in brief
He would take his colour, brushes and canvas outside to paint and talk with his love. He would stand close to the window and paint, keeping an eye on his muse.
They say the violin mimics the human sound. In his case, it was that of love, of longing. He didn’t know any other way of loving.
Younger people do not have much progressive beliefs; a 2017 survey found that one-third of young people opposed inter-caste marriage.
The pandemic has made it clear that virtual learning is here to stay. In the West, the big question is whether it will dilute the quality of the college experience and education. In India, which grapples with digital divide, the question remains whether this will reach most people at all.
Even after two years of the Covid-19 pandemic, many 'informed' individuals in India continue to deny the virus with unscientific claims and unfounded data. The latest? Omicron will end the pandemic.
Across Asia there are deeply entrenched obstacles to a mode of higher education that is liberal in multiple senses – disciplinary and epistemological but also social and political.
The two incidents in the recent past, one in Mon district of Nagaland and the other at Lakhimpur Kheri in Uttar Pradesh, undermined the core principles democracy and federalism.