Category Archives: Science & Technology

High-tech Bangalore Arrived on a Bullock Cart

The who-is-who of the global tech industry have turned India into their second home 


The satellite dish being unloaded at Texas Instruments, Bangalore in 1985.India’s IT capital Bangalore, which is keeping US President Obama awake at night, literally began its high-tech journey on a bullock cart. 

The first satellite dish in the country that helped a technology company set up round-the-clock communication link with its US offices arrived on a bullock-driven cart in 1985.
It also helped ) become the Texas Instruments (T) the first multinational to set up a software design centre in India and pioneer the country’s IT revolution 25 years ago.

TI’s communication director, K S Narahari, who stumbled upon this photograph recently, is not sure what prompted TI to use a handcrafted bullock cart to carry a state-of-the-art satellite dish to its office at Sona Towers on Miller’s road.

But undeterred by the country’s prevalent means of transport, other big-name tech companies followed TI, and a sizeable chunk of India leaped forward from the bullock-cart era to information-technology age. “India was an attractive destination as it had a good pool of engineers who were available at nearly one-fifth of US salaries,” says Praveen Bhadada, manager of Zinnov consulting.

The sensational success of the tech industry in India has also made it a highly visible target for anti-outsourcing campaigners from Obama to Ohio governor Ted Strickland, feel many experts.

Widespread presence

The who-is-who of the global tech industry have turned India into their second home. Every fourth employee of IT giants IBM, Oracle and Accenture is in India. Cisco has built its second headquarters in Bangalore and has reportedly shifted 20 per cent of its top executives to the city. Alcatel-Lucent is planning to invest $500 million to set up its global services base in India.

Last week, Capgemini announced that it will make India its global innovation hub. By the end of this year 35 per cent of its employees will be based in India. TI’s largest office outside USA is in India. Other global brands, Microsoft, Yahoo, Adobe and Google have a similar story to tell.

India’s technology industry grew slowly in the 1980s and 1990s. Most companies either did piece-meal, low-technology work or body shopped their employees to clients abroad. But after the liberalisation of the economy in early 1990s, several Fortune 100 companies gradually woke up to the low-cost talent pool available in the country and started setting up captive units. “This was a key event that started building brand India,” says Amneet Singh, vice president, Everest Research.

The Year 2000 or Y2K crisis was the next key milestone in the growth of Indian IT industry. Due to a limitation in software it was predicted that most computers would recognise the 2000 as the year 1900 and trigger a widespread breakdown of all industries that ran on computers — from airlines to banking.

To fix the problem, businesses had to get their entire software rewired. The process was laborious and expensive. It was also tailor-made for Indian companies who could deploy their armies of low-paid engineers working in India on the task.

The year 2000 set in peacefully and opinion is still divided if it was Indian engineers who stalled the crisis or whether the problem itself was overstated. But the crisis helped Indian companies build their credentials as trusted and economical service providers who could do large scale projects.

But India was still far from emerging as a tech dynamo. “Nobody had an idea about the technology revolution in the making,” says Amneet Singh. It took another crisis to give Indian firms their big break.

Outsourcing a boon

The dotcom crash and the recession at the beginning of this decade triggered a tidal wave of outsourcing and the Indian tech industry went on steroids. The number of MNC units in India more than tripled from 150 in 2000 to the present 650, says Praveen Bhadada.

About 2,30,000 engineers are working on multinational technology projects in India, making them the largest high-tech workforce outside USA. China with a similar tech work force of 1,80,000 engineers is a distant third. Other emerging countries like Philippines and Ukraine are reportedly 10 years behind India in high-tech work.

“Of the 650 multinational centres in the country, about 10 to 15 per cent are doing highest level of technical work while the majority is still focused on enjoying the cost benefits offered by the country. But the innovative companies have become a role model for others,” says Praveen Bhadada.

The technology revolution, more importantly, transformed home-grown IT companies such as Infosys, Wipro, TCS, HCL and erstwhile Satyam into global players.

For example, founded in 1981, Infosys took 19 years to touch $100 million annual revenue. But riding on the outsourcing wave its revenue grew by 40 times to reach four billion dollars by 2008.

Other Indian firms grew at a similar speed. The Indian IT industry expanded from $150 million in 1990-91 to the present $50 billion, redefining India’s stature in the world and triggering a backlash against outsourcing in the West.

“On the downside (of India’s growth), it has become a political nightmare and the culture clash, while much better than it was 10 years ago, will never really go away altogether,” says, Esteban Herrera, vice president, Horses for Sources.

Indian companies also transformed the outsourcing industry, by shifting work to India and driving down the cost. Before Indian firms arrived, “Deals were huge, lasted a very long time and tended to favour the seller. Delivery was on shore,” says Esteban Herrera.
“Competition from Indian firms made the industry better. It became more global, more customer-friendly, far more efficient, more flexible and cheaper,” he adds.

The Indian success triggered a stampede among outsourcing leaders to expand in India. IBM’s India employees grew 15-fold from 4,900 employees in 2002 to 73,000 in 2007.
Whether Obama likes it or not, India’s future in high-tech work is unshakable. “Of the global 1,000 R&D spenders, only 270-280 are in India,” says Praveen Bhadada. “There is lot of room for expansion,” he adds.

“There is room to grow the outsourcing business by 20 to 30 times,” says Amneet Singh. “The catch is Indian firms have to become more innovative than they have been so far,” he concludes.

source: http://www.deccanherald.com / By M A Arun / Sept 23rd, 2010

Success of India’s Resilient IT Industry makes US President Barack Obama mention Bangalore: Karnataka Governor

The success of India’s resilient IT industry makes US President Barack Obama mention Bangalore every time he talks about competition, Karnataka Governor H.R. Bhardwaj said Wednesday.

“Indian IT & BT (biotech) industry is synonymous with Bangalore. The very fact that the US president never forgets to mention Bangalore every time he talks about competition is a proof of recognition that we are in a position to compete with the best in the world,” Bhardwaj said in his Republic Day address here.

Lauding the achievements of the IT and BT sectors in the state, the governor said Bangalore had emerged on the international map attracting attention of every developed country, even to the extent of inviting admiration and envy from none other than the US.

“Our economy recovered much faster than many developed economies from the recent recession. It is the farsighted policies of the Indian government and the skilled young entrepreneurs with the cutting edge technologies that are helping to move on the path of recovery,” Bhardwaj said at the 62nd Republic Day celebrations in this tech hub.

The governor also highlighted the role of IT in ushering in e-governance and bringing several public services within the reach of the people across the state and Bangalore.

The expectations grow faster than the speed at which we can provide services,” he added

 

source: http://www.CoolAvenues.com / By IANS / Mon Jan 27th, 2011

 

Kiran Mazumdar Honoured

BANGALORE:

“Success is about pursuing a vision with a sense of purpose and a spirit of challenge. I also believe that success is about doing things in a differentiated way. Biocon’s byline is the difference lies in our DNA.” So said Kiran Mazumdar-Shaw as she received the Citizen Extraordinaire Award 2011 on Friday.

Governor H R Bhardwaj, who presented the award, said it is recognition of her efforts in advancing the biotechnology sector.

The award, instituted by the Prestige Group, in association with the Rotary Bangalore Midtown, is to honour citizens of Bangalore who have contributed to society and made a difference. Irfan Razack, the group’s CMD, said Kiran’s vision has helped establish Bangalore as a biotechnology hub in the world. “She is a source of inspiration for millions of women across India,” he said.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / TNN / May 07th, 2011

City Origin Scientist Leads Insulin Jab Research

LONDON/BANGALORE:

Researchers, including one of Bangalore origin, found that a new form of insulin that needs to be taken three times a week is as effective as the once-a-day medication. Clinical trials, held in India, Canada, South Africa and the US, showed that the new longer-acting form of insulin, called Degludec, works effectively in controlling blood sugar among patients with Type 2 diabetes.

One in three patients with type-2 diabetes, whose body does not produce enough insulin, currently has to get insulin at least once a day to keep the blood sugar under check.

Researchers, led by Dr Yogish Kudva who and Dr Ananda Basu from Mayo Clinic College of Medicine in the US, said that patients might stick to their medical regime if it was less onerous. Dr Kudva, an alumni of the St John’s Medical College, Bangalore, informed Express over e-mail that the trials were held from January to August 2008. The paper had two other authors from India — Prof P V Rao of the Nizam’s Institute of Medical Sciences University, Hyderabad, and Prof N Thomas of the Christian Medical College, Vellore, according to Dr Kudva.

Asked when the drug could possibly be available in India, Dr Kudva said it would depend on the regulatory agency review of ongoing trial data.

For their trials, the researchers recruited 245 people with Type 2 diabetes, who had not previously been prescribed insulin.

Two-thirds were told to use Degludec once a day or three times a week. The remainder had daily jabs of insulin glargine — a widely used medication. Findings showed similar control of blood sugar levels across all three groups, the researchers reported in the British medical journal ‘The Lancet’.

But those given daily jabs of Degludec had fewer attacks of hypoglycaemia or low blood sugar, they said.

Danish manufacturer Novo Nordisk hopes to apply for licensing approval to market the drug in 2013. (With PTI inputs)

 

source: http://www.expressbuzz.com / Express News Services / Mar 11th, 2011

 

City Gets First Commercial BioDiesel Unit

BANGALORE:

The first commercial biodiesel unit owned by Eco Green Fuels Pvt Ltd was launched here on Sunday. Inaugurating the plant, Chief Minister B S Yeddyurappa and BJP national president Nitin Gadkari appreciated the initiative.

Further, Gadkari said, “Starting Monday we are organising a twoday conference on bioenergy. After the conference we will have a better idea about the situation of biofuel in the state and can come up with other propositions. Our country has been importing about 90 per cent of crude oil from other countries, so biodiesel would be a good substitute for diesel.”

Julesh Bantia, director, Eco Green Fuels Pvt Ltd, said, “As of now the unit has a capacity to produce about 5,000 litres of biodiesel per day. The machine is indigenously built inhouse by our technicians and R D team. Depending on the requirement, we are planning to increase the manufacturing capacity

 

source: http://www.expressbuzz.com / Express News Service / Feb 21st, 2011

 

Bangalore is Job Hub for Engineering Graduates

BANGALORE:
Bangalore draws in 72 per cent of engineering graduates from all over India to pick their first job.

According to a survey conducted by Aspiring Minds Research Cell, an employability measurement and recruitment firm, the city topples even the national capital Delhi. Southern cities, Hyderabad and Chennai get third and fifth spots respectively.

The scale of the survey includes 19,000 engineering student samples across India.

Himanshu Aggarwal, founder and director, Aspiring Minds, said, “In India, Bangalore is the engineers’ Mecca. It offers growth, options and a community of like-minded people. Bangalore has undoubtedly the largest base in terms of IT companies, opportunities and an existing engineering population.” Well, that is just one part of the story. Biotechnology (BT) is another sector which attracts a huge mass of prospective employees from all over the country. Biotech pioneer Kiran Mazumdar- Shaw said, “In this field, Bangalore has the largest number of opportunities for engineering students. As there are a large number of BT firms, the ecosystem is very good. There are a lot of young engineers and scientists who come up with innovative ideas and set up organisations which makes a lot of difference in evoking interest among young graduates,” she explained.

Techie Chandi Prasad of Orissa now settled in Bangalore said, “Compared to Orissa, Madhya Pradesh and West Bengal, Bangalore has more opportunities.” Bangalore has a range of jobs and there is a demand for good people, said Mohandas Pai, Director, HR, Infosys Technologies.

 

source: http://www.expressbuzz.com / Chokkapan S / Express News Service / Mar 03rd, 2011

 

Google to Launch Street View in Bangalore

BANGALORE:
Citing Bangalore’s status as the country’s tech capital, Google announced on Thursday that it will begin imagery collection in the city for the Street View feature on Google Maps.

Sharing their operational model, company officials said Google’s cars and Trikes, a specially designed three-wheel pedicab with a camera system mounted on top, will begin driving and taking street-level photographs of public locations around the city.

The images will be made available in the coming months in Street View on Google Maps. The company did not the reveal the exact day of the feature’s launch.

Stating that the maps technology was already available in 27 other countries, they said this allows users to virtually explore and navigate a neighbourhood through panoramic street-level images. They added that the product would be available on Google Maps for mobiles. Company officials said they would start gathering images from select locations in the area over the next few weeks.

Speaking about their new venture, product head of the company, Vinay Goel said they had decided to start driving in Bangalore because it is the IT capital of India and feel that IT-savvy users will be able to leverage the benefits of the product to the fullest. He said Street View was also useful for urban development planners, law enforcement agencies, house hunters and travellers.

Addressing concerns of security and privacy, he said the product will respect privacy and has developed highly sophisticated technology that blurs faces and number plates of vehicles.

Goel said the product was designed to comply with local laws, including those of security and privacy

 

source: http://www.expressbuzz.com / Express News Service / May 27th, 2011