The troubled education technology company BYJU'S has faced another setback as its primary learning application has been removed from the Google Play Store due to outstanding payments to Amazon Web ...
Byju's learning app has been removed from Google Playstore due to unpaid dues to Amazon Web Services. (Reuters / Adnan Abidi) Troubled edutech unicorn Byju's learning app has been delisted from the ...
Byju's learning app has been removed from the Google Play Store due to unpaid dues to Amazon Web Services. Think and Learn, which operates under the Byju's brand, is now managed by an Insolvency ...
Beleaguered edtech firm Byju's learning app has been delisted from Google Play Store due to non-payment of dues to its vendor Amazon Web Services, according to sources. AWS has been trying to resolve ...
Beleaguered edtech firm Byju's learning app has been delisted from Google Playstore due to non-payment of dues to its vendor Amazon Web Services, according to sources. While some of the other apps of ...
Trouble edutech unicorn Byju's learning app has been delisted from the Google Playstore for non-payment of vendor dues, according to a PTI report, citing sources. The matter has been under works ...
In 2015, a young engineer from Kerala in south India came up with an ambitious plan to take math and science online and make it fun for the country’s stressed teenagers. But instead of remaining ...
Byju's, the Indian edutech startup, is facing a liquidity crunch as its valuation drops from $22 billion to under $3 billion. The company's sales machine, which helped it become the world's most ...
A ‘brand for purpose’ in COVID times – and indeed at all times – is what Byju’s learning app aims to be. The journey towards building attribution for education is a crucial part of the unfolding of ...
BYJU’S, the world's most valuable edtech company, unveiled its latest regional ad campaign today, targeting Telangana and Andhra Pradesh and starring The Prince of Tollywood, Mahesh Babu. The all new ...
Byju’s says that many of the instances highlighted in the book aren’t systemic deficiencies, but localised lapses that occurred in the past — during a period of very rapid growth.