Kary Arora (born 7 January 1977) was the first female professional DJ in Delhi, and possibly in all of India. Arora began DJing in 1997 and the 5th female music composer in Bollywood. She ventured into music composition, writing lyrics, rapping, grunge singing and made a mark in Indian Music and Film Industry.
Kary Arora was born in Chandigarh, India on 7 January 1977.
Her childhood was regular except she was very much inclined towards poetry, sketching, music and storytelling. She won a poetry contest at the age of 4, used to Sketch cartoons copying from newspaper and hated math badly.
There were no profound Dj-ing schools back in India in 1997, so she joined Adersh sound and light company in Delhi as a sound labor/DJ for rupees 300 to understand digital connections of console. She taught herself Dj-ing in one year, while shifting jobs in Delhi.
Her training for music and keyboards happened under Guru Ravi Prakash, grandson of late Shri Khemchand Prakash (who was the music composer of song Ayega anewala… of Lata Manageshker jee in movie Mahal), provides her with a greater understanding of music-a highly unusual skill for a DJ. She studied Audio Engineering from SAE Institute, Chennai to improve her skills of songwriting.
The Arora(in Punjabi ਅਰੋੜਾ is a community of the Punjab region closely related to Khatri community.
Aroras were mainly concentrated in West Punjab (now Pakistan) along the banks of the Indus River and its tributaries; in the Malwa region in East Punjab (a part of India), although not greatly in what became the North-West Frontier Province from 1901; in Sindh (mainly as Sindhi Aroras but there were many Punjabi and Multani speaking Aroras as well); in Rajasthan (as Jodhpuri and Nagauri Aroras/Khatris); and in Gujarat. In post-independence and post-partition India, Aroras mainly reside in Punjab, Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, Delhi, Jammu, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, Uttarakhand and Gujarat.
Denzil Ibbetson, who wrote the Report for the Indian census of 1881, notes that "The Aroras are often called Roras in the east of the Panjab". However, he considers the community calling itself Ror to be distinct from the Punjabi Arora, stating that "I can hardly believe that the frank and stalwart Ror is of the same origin as the Arora" even though they shared a common account of their origin. The account was that in the past they had denied their original status in order to avoid persecution, and were in fact "Rajputs who escaped the fury of Paras Ram by stating that their caste was aur or 'another'", from which word their name came.
Arora is a lightweight, cross-platform, free and open-source web browser developed by Benjamin C. Meyer. Arora is available for Linux, OS X, Windows, FreeBSD, OS/2, Haiku, and any other operating system supported by the Qt toolkit. Arora's name is a palindrome.
The browser's features include tabbed browsing, bookmarks, browsing history, smart location bar, OpenSearch, session management, privacy mode, a download manager, WebInspector, and AdBlock.
For several months, Meyer discontinued development of Arora due to uncertainty about the strictures of non-compete clauses by his employer; finally in July 2011, he announced that he would no longer contribute to the project. Another software developer, Bastien Pederencino forked Arora's source code, and published a variant called zBrowser — renamed Zeromus Browser in February 2013. In May 2013, Pederencino published another variant called BlueLightCat. In February 2014, some new patches were released on Arora's github project page, with some Linux distributions incorporating the changes in their individual versions of Arora packages in their repositories.
Arora (Hindi: अरोरा, Punjabi: ਅਰੋੜਾ) is a surname common in the Arora caste in South Asia. It most likely originated in Sindh, and spread to India after the Partition of India. There are c. 360,000 people with this surname.
Notable people with the surname include: