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India Developing, but still a long way to go

Any comments re: below?

Indian IT Sector TO Cross $ 225 in 2020


Newer technologies such as social media, analytics and cloud computing (SMAC) will help India’s IT-BPO industry cross $225-billion-mark in revenues by 2020, according to a CII report. These technologies have opened new avenues for the Indian IT-BPO vendors.

(c) IT sector revenue to cross $225 b by 2020 - Worldnews.com
 
patentneer,

I salute Ruchi Sanghvi, she reminds me of my own cousin sisters and mom! Yeay!
 
Colorful Trichy

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hope this is relevant to the thread:
http://www.thehindu.com/news/cities/Tiruchirapalli/the-team-of-12-show-the-way/article5130235.ece

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The ‘team of 12’ show the way

First generation women entrepreneurs have stormed a male bastion by starting BHEL ancillary units on the outskirts of Tiruchi

The hand that rocks the cradle rules the world. These hands were only rocking the cradle and handling ladles about a decade back. Today, they work with sophisticated engineering tools. None of them ever dreamt of jumping from the kitchen into an industrial environment. The brigade of first generation entrepreneurs has heroically stormed a male bastion – engineering industry – and kept its flag flying high when there is all-round sluggishness in the industry.

The “team of 12” stands out as it has broken a new path in entrepreneurship – far away from making garments, eco-friendly items, toys, sweets, chocolates, and pickles. With their educational qualification ranging from class 5 to M. Phil., these entrepreneurs have come up the hard way and now operate their units on their own with a monthly salary disbursal of Rs. 1.5 lakh a unit with an average workforce of 10. The tiny units owned by them are located in Mathur, a city suburb, and Pudukudi village bordering Tiruchi district.

“We did not know anything about entrepreneurship or engineering tools. After becoming members of Women Entrepreneurs’ Association of Tamil Nadu (WEAT), we were exposed to entrepreneurship, managerial, and computer skills. We have been properly trained in welding at the National Institute of Technology. Today, we are as proficient as a technically qualified person in choosing the right raw material, using computers and giving technical instructions to our employees,” says M. Rajamaheswari, who quit her bank job to start the industry. This M. Phil. graduate, who recently registered for Ph. D., commutes between Thanjavur and Pudukudi to manage her fabrication unit.

At the other end of the spectrum are school dropouts like G. Jansi Rani. All the 12 entrepreneurs are vendors (ancillary units) for the Bharat Heavy Electricals Limited (BHEL) fabricating boiler components and three of them — R. Vasugi, S. Geetha, and R. Thamarai Selvi — have won Best Performer awards.

“We have not closed our units even for a day,” says S. Jesus Mary. This statement is made in the context of frequent power shutdown, cost escalation, and changes in policies governing ancillary units of the BHEL. “Even on days of acute power scarcity, we operated with generators, and without minding the impact on our earnings,” T. Palaniselvi adds.

The secret of their success lies in two factors — hard work and support from family, society, WEAT, Department of Women’s Studies, Bharathidasan University, BHEL, banks, Tiruchi District Tiny and Small Scale Industries Association, and District Industries Centre. Their unity has sustained them in an area into which even seasoned men entrepreneurs fear to tread now. They are together in whatever they do – getting orders from the BHEL or meeting a bank manager to seek concessions. “We hail from the middle class without any financial background. Our unity is our strength,” says J. Victorya.

The striking distinction of these entrepreneurs is that they are not a proxy of a father, brother, husband, or uncle. They are genuinely proud of their spouses for the respect and understanding they show to them.

T. Rajeswari’s husband left a job to work for his wife. “He refused to sit in my chair till his death, as he was proud to be a worker in my fabrication unit,” says Ms. Rajeswari, the sole breadwinner of the family.

The future for these ancillary units, started in 2009, lies in sustained patronage from the BHEL. Some of them have repaid the loans taken from banks and look forward to a leap into the small industry league.
 
Signature bridge, Delhi U/C

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New Delhi: 19/09/2013: Commencement of the erection of the central Pylon at Signature Bridge Site, at Wazirabad , in New Delhi on Thursday . Photo: Sushil Kumar Verma. The Hindu
 
'India Empowered'

A tribute to the privatisation of electricity generation in India.


Identifying the private sector as productive, efficient and transparent, the film presents a series of private players in contemporary India who have tried to ensure that power deficiency is met.

Hailing the Electricity Act 2003 as a seminal legislation that allows private power generation as well as access of private players to the state owned transmission and distribution network, the film looks at the various aspects that go into ensuring that electricity reaches homes.

The film also touches on the situation of renewable resources and presents a series of private players who are determined to use renewable resources like the solar and wind energy to produce electricity.

Electricity privatisation in India is an ongoing success story, never mind that govt. documentaries like above can be labeled propaganda. Facts are facts.
 
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^^

India developing ...

Abhey Singh, a larger pic. of your above post pls., post more of your Mumbai pic.'s.

photostream


Powai Lake (15/365) | Flickr - Photo Sharing!

photostream


Powai Lake (5/365) | Flickr - Photo Sharing!

(c) Abhey Singh

:offtopic:

AP Information Technology and Communications Minister Ponnala Lakshmaiah:

  • " ... along with support of central government, we are aiming to develop The Information Technology Investment Region (ITIR) to give the impetus for the IT growth in Hyderabad. We are providing both external and internal infrastructure facilities for 50,000 acres (around 202 sq km) in Gachibowli, Uppal and Shamshabad with a Rs 4, 800 crore budget :woot: ! "
This is the largest area ever imagined or planned for development for attracting IT industry. Karnataka and Orissa are developing 10,000 acres each

Hyderabad IT boom looks like this at present, and better:

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Hyderabad has direct and indirect employment of about 1 Mil. in IT alone out of total ~ 8 Mil.
 
I have been here and it is no less than Taj Mahal

Akshardham, Delhi

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its just miles ahead of taj mahal but taj is overhyped and add with it the over glamorization of islamic/mughal past in india by the academia and we have overevalutation of these places and undervaluation of hindu wonders like akshardham
 
its just miles ahead of taj mahal but taj is overhyped and add with it the over glamorization of islamic/mughal past in india by the academia and we have overevalutation of these places and undervaluation of hindu wonders like akshardham

No dude, Taj mahal is known for its Marble, its symmetry and intrinsic work (on its wall). No other monument is comparable when it comes to these three things

But Akshardham is eye candy, as i said no less than Taj Mahal in its own way
 
Organised religion is organised religion, with or without Taj, Akshardham or the Haggia Sophia.


  • The whole world knows the Taj is the Taj, let's avoid 'I'm stupider then you' competition.
Meanwhile, Bangalore IT Park boom:

'Temples of modern India' - Nehru had said but today's India is hate driven;


  • quick zinger to the above posters ...
    where would you rather work - a Banglore IT park, Taj Mahal or Akshardham ?
Personally I prefer the upcoming IT Park even if I qualify for all three.

RMZ Bangalore

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Done

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IT park by ASF, Gurgaon

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Mumbai Meri Jaan

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(c) dawn digital @ http://img208.imageshack.us/img208/1278/mg6z.jpg
 
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