That famous quote — "Code is poetry" — used by a widely known CMS always resonated with me. As an entrepreneur who writes, builds, and communicates through systems, I’ve lived inside the creator world from both ends: the product and the publishing. Like many from the millennial generation and beyond, I’ve worked within the digital rhythm of pushing content live — posts, schedules, formats, and communities.
Back in 2010, I had launched a startup called FansFlow.com — with a vision to help internet influencers generate revenue from their presence. It was a concept ahead of its time, one that could’ve contributed to reshaping the early creator economy. But like many early ideas, it couldn’t find its wings — caught in the storm of external manipulations that plagued independent innovation.
Since then, technology has evolved rapidly — and so has the volume of creators and content. But monetization models have not kept pace. Many creators still operate within fragile, gig-hungry ecosystems — chasing reach or temporary work instead of building value and ownership.
Bookstreaming is my contribution — a prototype aimed at long-term improvement of the creator economy. It is a modern approach to online publishing in a web book format: a structured blend of blogging, vlogging, and independent storytelling — built to encourage clarity, depth, and narrative control.
In the longer run, if this model evolves meaningfully, it may inspire big tech APIs and platforms to offer deeper support and integration — helping creators retain their independence while still participating in the broader digital landscape.
Outside Their Kabalium is inspired by the real-life journey of Suhas, the founder of KenFolios and IMPS. It chronicles his decision to stay outside of the seductive world of blind money-chasing and unethical power games—a path that’s often lonely and difficult, but necessary for the survival of humankind.
Kabalium is a coined term that blends two roots: Kabila (قَبِيلَة), from Arabic/Persian origin, meaning a tribe or clan; and Cabal, of Latin origin via French and English, referring to a secretive, often sinister group of conspirators. Together, Kabalium reflects the idea of tightly-knit but ethically compromised circles that manipulate systems out of greed, often at the cost of collective well-being.
This web book is based on an exclusive report Suhas originally wrote for the KenFolios Business Community and later shared with a circle of highly valued entrepreneurs and professionals—to safeguard their work from being quietly depreciated by cunning manipulators. He eventually published it as a blog post for a wider audience. The original title was “Outside Their Algorithm”, referencing how certain groups create fake stories to game digital systems and glorify their dealers, peddlers, and PR swingers. The title was later changed to avoid collateral damage to the reputation of the talented developers and reputed organisations who build and maintain today’s tech platforms and algorithms.
This is not just a book you read — it's one you watch, listen to, and feel. Chapters will stream soon in the form of writing, videos, reels, voice notes, and visual elements. Bookstreaming is an unfolding media experience, not just a scroll.
In the quiet lanes of Goregaon, a modest suburb of Mumbai, I was raised by resilience.
My parents served the government, and we lived with quiet dignity — not poor, but not rich enough for the city's rising pace.
I lost my father at nine. Too young to grieve the loss, but old enough to feel the gap.
That absence turned me inward — into a thinker, an observer, a silent planner.
My mother carried our home with grace. I watched the world, quietly preparing to lead mine.
Between schoolbooks and street learnings, I picked up small jobs. They didn’t feel like work — they felt like clues.
This wasn’t just childhood. It was the ignition of something deeper.
2003–2004
I was building quietly — for the very streets that had raised me, a transport project rooted in purpose, not ambition. But Mumbai was changing, and with its growth came sharper shadows. An old conflict found new oxygen. What began as a business act was pulled into a game I never played — and before I could step back, politics had stepped in.
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Right after the seeds of regrowth were sown, came the sharpest fall.
A brutal conspiracy, a fractured team, and a crushing personal betrayal —
they didn’t just shake my work, they shook my identity.
I kept moving, but inside, I had collapsed. It was dark, isolating, and invisible to the world.
What I faced wasn’t burnout — it was real depression. Silent, invasive, and nearly fatal to the spirit.
The dreams I once carried felt weightless, like smoke.
But in the silence of that breakdown, I began hearing something new: a need to rebuild not from anger, but from awareness.
In this section, I’ll open up about what it means to fall — emotionally, mentally — even when you're “strong,” “sharp,” and “successful.” Especially for founders, professionals, and people who always carry others — it’s time we talk about what carrying ourselves really takes.
2005–2006
I was an entrepreneur, but my story wasn’t just business. The deeper I went, the clearer it became — I had brushed against high-level political circuits, and the fallout demanded a different kind of response. I spoke out — sometimes in anger, often in truth — and what began as survival became vision. Years of experiments, comebacks, and quiet research gave rise to ideas no manifesto had solved. It was time. I announced my political R&D project — the Indian Millennium Political Startup. I’m not a politician, but I’m building what politics has failed to: long-term solutions for both the overlooked and the overexposed — in business, politics, and public life.
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Amidst all the struggle, there has been so, so much learning —
insights that life carved gently, sometimes painfully.
And when you’re gifted that much clarity,
it demands not applause, but the creation of something truly meaningful —
for good, nice people who deserve better.
That’s when I began shaping VStreet —
not just as a project, but as a promise to apply what I’ve understood
to solve much-needed problems in the right way.
Behind every line you read or scroll through lies a stack of code, caffeine, clarity, and chaos. This web book blends storytelling with systems — powered by a range of tools and technologies. What started with just HTML, CSS, and JavaScript will grow to include data layers, content APIs, serverless integrations, and creator-first monetization methods.
This form is a quiet corner of this web book — for readers, collaborators, and curious minds. Whether it’s feedback, media participation, or ideas worth building, you’re welcome to write in.