Titan Company announced on October 4 that it achieved approximately 25% year-on-year growth in the second quarter of FY25, according to its quarterly business update. The Tata Group-owned company ...
Titan Company has recently dipped below its 20-day Exponential Moving Average, with the current price recorded at Rs 3686.60. This decline represents a percentage change of -2.37% for the day, while ...
Helios—The Watch Store, a multi-brand retailer of premium watches owned by Titan Co. Ltd, plans to launch exclusive outlets for luxury timepieces to cater to demand in the world’s fastest ...
More than two dozen witnesses testified. A two-week hearing into OceanGate's Titan submersible concluded on Friday, as the U.S. Coast Guard investigates the unprecedented, catastrophic implosion ...
Talbot says the company did not do the search patterns given by the Coast Guard because they were “more concerned [Titan] had not resurfaced and were focused on finding its location sub surface ...
said OceanGate’s financial woes contributed to his decision to leave the company just months before the Titan and its crew were lost. “The company was economically very stressed,” he testified.
OceanGate’s co-founder said the carbon fiber hull used in an experimental submersible that ... Here are some of the highlights that came up during the discussion of OceanGate Inc. and its submersible ...
SKINN, the fragrance division of Titan, has announced the launch of its latest 'affordable' fragrance line - 24Seven. The company said it would also roll out a new range of Fastrack Perfumes. With ...
Stockton Rush, the OceanGate co-founder and CEO behind the doomed Titan submersible, knew it would eventually kill him but kept his venture moving forward because he knew he wouldn't be held ...
Businessman Guillermo Sohnlein, who helped found OceanGate with Rush, ultimately left the company before the Titan disaster. OceanGate, based in Washington state, suspended its operations after ...
Stanley said the “mission specialist” title was one of the ways the company eschewed regulations and safety warnings. Stanley went down 12,000 feet in the first iteration of the Titan hull.