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Tesla to set up electric car manufacturing unit in India’s Karnataka State😎!

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By winning the Kuwait Municipality tender order for 815 trucks, Tata Motors consolidated its position as a prominent player in the Middle East commercial vehicle market. The recent order was almost double of the previous order awarded to the company in 2011 and constitutes over 80% of the tender requirement of trucks in the heavy, medium and light categories for applications like tippers, tankers, cargo and vehicle recovery units for Kuwait Municipality. It is also the largest single order of Tata Motor’s Prima trucks and is thereby setting new benchmarks for performance and success in international markets.

Speaking on the occasion, Mr. Rudrarup Maitra, Head – International Business, Commercial Vehicles, Tata Motors Ltd. said, “Tata Motors has been selling its commercial vehicles in Kuwait for over 45 years. Tata Motors with its ILCV & MHCV truck segment platforms offers safe, efficient and comfortable means of transportation as well as unparalleled return on investment and dependability to their customers. They provide transport solutions to customers across all projects related to the oil sector and general infrastructure development in Kuwait.

The recent order is reflective of our commitment to be an integral participant in the international landscape as well. The tender will help boost brand visibility for Tata Motors and we hope to continue our long and rewarding partnership with the Kuwait Municipality. We also conducted training workshops for the 800 plus drivers to familiarize them with the vehicles, to have better drivability and performance

The TATA PRIMA designed by technology, know-how and expertise with global standards of power, durability, payload, emissions and safety will enable customers upgrade to a new-age truck, with new-age global specifications and systems, a result of customer feedback combined with years of experience in the trucking business. The range being launched today is world-smart in every sense. The TATA ULTRA is specially designed to meet the changing customer needs in the light commercial vehicle segment. It’s a BUV (Business Utility Vehicle) offering an SUV like comfort with a truck like performance and the profitability of a Light Commercial Vehicle

We are confident that through our trusted partnership with Al Zayani Company, we will be successful in establishing a long-term relationship with our customers.”


This kind of company will not compete worldwide. It can only be success in india under the protection of India government. If it goes out of India or beyond sphere, it will loses badly. :enjoy:




This is what I can competitive in neutral high end market ground. That is real competition. We are talking about EV and you show me conventional trucks?
 
This kind of company will not compete worldwide. It can only be success in india under the protection of India government. If it goes out of India or beyond sphere, it will loses badly. :enjoy:




This is what I can competitive in neutral high end market ground. That is real competition.
Copy cat technology transferring back to Europe.. He he he
 
Copy cat technology transferring back to Europe.. He he he
LOL.. Sourgraped. Even Europe and India do not have such high end EV tech sold by BYD. The real copycat is india. Can only compete in outdated combustion tech which China are not counting on.

BYD is a highly innovative EV company using own tech like blade battery and Iron Phosphate tech. That is why even a rich country with high standard like Netherland need to buys from BYD China. :enjoy: Even Warren Buffet invested in BYD but why not Tata motor?


Loser can only afford to post loser comment like copycat to mask his inferiority. I can understand the feeling of being left behind. Poor you! :lol:
 
I'm sure Tesla's investment will bring some tech infusion in India, which is different than China's market, where the Chinese can go tête-à-tête in technology with their own products.
I agree. Tesla setting-up a unit in India is not a chest-thumping feat. India is way behind China when it comes to own manufacturing.
The IT industry has generated lot of employment in India but thats about it. When it comes to making software products & IPRs, the Indian IT industry is hardly anywhere.
Google & Microsoft may be headed by Indians but they keep India at an arms length when it comes to the sharing the "soft power" they posses.
Fault is not theirs, fault is in India's own slave mentality.
 
LOL.. Sourgraped. Even Europe and India do not have such high end EV tech sold by BYD. The real copycat is india. Can only compete in outdated combustion tech which China are not counting on.

BYD is a highly innovative EV company using own tech like blade battery and Iron Phosphate tech. That is why even a rich country with high standard like Netherland need to buys from BYD China. :enjoy: Even Warren Buffet invested in BYD but why not Tata motor?


Loser can only afford to post loser comment like copycat to mask his inferiority. I can understand the feeling of being left behind. Poor you! :lol:
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LOL.. Sourgraped. Even Europe and India do not have such high end EV tech sold by BYD. The real copycat is india. Can only compete in outdated combustion tech which China are not counting on.

BYD is a highly innovative EV company using own tech like blade battery and Iron Phosphate tech. That is why even a rich country with high standard like Netherland need to buys from BYD China. :enjoy: Even Warren Buffet invested in BYD but why not Tata motor?


Loser can only afford to post loser comment like copycat to mask his inferiority. I can understand the feeling of being left behind. Poor you! :lol:
TATA MOTORS is the owner of Jaguar Land Rover you fool
 
I agree. Tesla setting-up a unit in India is not a chest-thumping feat. India is way behind China when it comes to own manufacturing.
The IT industry has generated lot of employment in India but thats about it. When it comes to making software products & IPRs, the Indian IT industry is hardly anywhere.
Google & Microsoft may be headed by Indians but they keep India at an arms length when it comes to the sharing the "soft power" they posses.
Fault is not theirs, fault is in India's own slave mentality.
1. Pentium chip by Vinod Dham
Most of us probably know that Pentium microprocessor chips play a vital role in the speed and performance of a computer. The first Pentium chip was invented in 1993 by Vinod Dham, a technologist of Indian origin. Dham was working at Intel when he and his team developed the Pentium chip. Now, the world knows him as the father of Pentium processors.

2. Hotmail by Sabeer Bhatia
Hotmail is considered one of the very first free web-based email services in the world. The person behind its creation is also an Indian, Sabeer Bhatia. Sabeer along with one of his colleagues, Jack Smith, launched hotmail.com on July 4, 1996, that was later acquired by Microsoft.

3. Universal Serial Bus (USB) by Ajay Bhatt
USB is one of the most disruptive technologies in the computer world. The credit of inventing USB technology goes to Ajay Bhatt, an Indian computer architect. Before USB, computers used serial and parallel ports to plug devices into computers and transfer data. Ajay developed USB technology in 1994 and now, he holds one hundred and thirty-two U.S. and international patents, while several others are in various stages of filing.

4. Fibre Optics by Dr. Narinder Singh Kapany
Yes, this might be a surprising revelation for you. Dr. Narinder Singh Kapany, an Indian-origin physicist is considered the creator of the first actual fibre optic cable that was invented in 1952 based on John Tyndall’s experiments three decades earlier. Kapany coined the term 'fibre optics' in an article in Scientific American in 1960, wrote the first book about the new field, and was the new field's most prominent researcher, writer, and spokesperson.
Is easy to make a prototype. Only a few chosen with world class spec that can compete in real world to win order from developed countries like Netherland.

Btw, fuel cell are not the mainstream. In fact, outdated tech which is dead even before its popular.
I agree. Tesla setting-up a unit in India is not a chest-thumping feat. India is way behind China when it comes to own manufacturing.
The IT industry has generated lot of employment in India but thats about it. When it comes to making software products & IPRs, the Indian IT industry is hardly anywhere.
Google & Microsoft may be headed by Indians but they keep India at an arms length when it comes to the sharing the "soft power" they posses.
Fault is not theirs, fault is in India's own slave mentality.
They only copy other products and call Them made in China?
Bro he is a Pakistani pretending to be a chinese...
 
1. Pentium chip by Vinod Dham
Most of us probably know that Pentium microprocessor chips play a vital role in the speed and performance of a computer. The first Pentium chip was invented in 1993 by Vinod Dham, a technologist of Indian origin. Dham was working at Intel when he and his team developed the Pentium chip. Now, the world knows him as the father of Pentium processors.

2. Hotmail by Sabeer Bhatia
Hotmail is considered one of the very first free web-based email services in the world. The person behind its creation is also an Indian, Sabeer Bhatia. Sabeer along with one of his colleagues, Jack Smith, launched hotmail.com on July 4, 1996, that was later acquired by Microsoft.

3. Universal Serial Bus (USB) by Ajay Bhatt
USB is one of the most disruptive technologies in the computer world. The credit of inventing USB technology goes to Ajay Bhatt, an Indian computer architect. Before USB, computers used serial and parallel ports to plug devices into computers and transfer data. Ajay developed USB technology in 1994 and now, he holds one hundred and thirty-two U.S. and international patents, while several others are in various stages of filing.

4. Fibre Optics by Dr. Narinder Singh Kapany
Yes, this might be a surprising revelation for you. Dr. Narinder Singh Kapany, an Indian-origin physicist is considered the creator of the first actual fibre optic cable that was invented in 1952 based on John Tyndall’s experiments three decades earlier. Kapany coined the term 'fibre optics' in an article in Scientific American in 1960, wrote the first book about the new field, and was the new field's most prominent researcher, writer, and spokesperson.



Bro he is a Pakistani pretending to be a chinese...
1. Pentium chip by Vinod Dham
Most of us probably know that Pentium microprocessor chips play a vital role in the speed and performance of a computer. The first Pentium chip was invented in 1993 by Vinod Dham, a technologist of Indian origin. Dham was working at Intel when he and his team developed the Pentium chip. Now, the world knows him as the father of Pentium processors.

2. Hotmail by Sabeer Bhatia
Hotmail is considered one of the very first free web-based email services in the world. The person behind its creation is also an Indian, Sabeer Bhatia. Sabeer along with one of his colleagues, Jack Smith, launched hotmail.com on July 4, 1996, that was later acquired by Microsoft.

3. Universal Serial Bus (USB) by Ajay Bhatt
USB is one of the most disruptive technologies in the computer world. The credit of inventing USB technology goes to Ajay Bhatt, an Indian computer architect. Before USB, computers used serial and parallel ports to plug devices into computers and transfer data. Ajay developed USB technology in 1994 and now, he holds one hundred and thirty-two U.S. and international patents, while several others are in various stages of filing.
Vinod Dham, Sabeer Bhatia, Arun Netravalli, Vinod Khosla - these names made rounds 20 years ago
Then we heard Indra Nooyi, Rajiv Gupta
Now we have Nadella, Pichai, Shantanu Naryan
All India origin. Together they cover few generations
What has India got? Fair share of employment & money. Thats is. And, that too is not because of these "Indian origin" people. It happened naturally.
4. Fibre Optics by Dr. Narinder Singh Kapany
Yes, this might be a surprising revelation for you. Dr. Narinder Singh Kapany, an Indian-origin physicist is considered the creator of the first actual fibre optic cable that was invented in 1952 based on John Tyndall’s experiments three decades earlier. Kapany coined the term 'fibre optics' in an article in Scientific American in 1960, wrote the first book about the new field, and was the new field's most prominent researcher, writer, and spokesperson.
Many Indian origin have won noble prize too. Hargobind Khurana. S Chandrasekhar

An "IT Superpower" not having its own domestic technology solution for maps & navigation, thats a pity. After a decade, we are thinking are of doing something which someone else is already done. Better to do something new. Doing something that is already done by someone may be ok but do it without chest thumping
 
1. Pentium chip by Vinod Dham
Most of us probably know that Pentium microprocessor chips play a vital role in the speed and performance of a computer. The first Pentium chip was invented in 1993 by Vinod Dham, a technologist of Indian origin. Dham was working at Intel when he and his team developed the Pentium chip. Now, the world knows him as the father of Pentium processors.

2. Hotmail by Sabeer Bhatia
Hotmail is considered one of the very first free web-based email services in the world. The person behind its creation is also an Indian, Sabeer Bhatia. Sabeer along with one of his colleagues, Jack Smith, launched hotmail.com on July 4, 1996, that was later acquired by Microsoft.

3. Universal Serial Bus (USB) by Ajay Bhatt
USB is one of the most disruptive technologies in the computer world. The credit of inventing USB technology goes to Ajay Bhatt, an Indian computer architect. Before USB, computers used serial and parallel ports to plug devices into computers and transfer data. Ajay developed USB technology in 1994 and now, he holds one hundred and thirty-two U.S. and international patents, while several others are in various stages of filing.

4. Fibre Optics by Dr. Narinder Singh Kapany
Yes, this might be a surprising revelation for you. Dr. Narinder Singh Kapany, an Indian-origin physicist is considered the creator of the first actual fibre optic cable that was invented in 1952 based on John Tyndall’s experiments three decades earlier. Kapany coined the term 'fibre optics' in an article in Scientific American in 1960, wrote the first book about the new field, and was the new field's most prominent researcher, writer, and spokesperson.



Bro he is a Pakistani pretending to be a chinese...
I know, :pdf: is blocked by Chinese Firewall.
 
The spelling of Bangladesh is not I.N.D.I.A you get it? Come to Bangalore to see how many people have supercars snd who were waiting for Tesla to Arrive, they already have an R&D centre here, in future they will manufacture better cars.

OK Rajju - whatever you say.... :lol:
Butthurts have startd their rants, if we are so poor, or can’t afford Teslas then why are they coming to manufacture here? This plant will cater the whole South Asian region maybe. And its a fact that they are gonna manufacture cars here so keep your data with you:chilli::chilli::chilli:.

South Asia? WTF ??

I know Pakistanis aren't going to buy your Teslas, and neither are Bangladeshis (they won't touch any Indian product with a ten foot pole).

So you'll be selling them to Sri Lanka and Nepal? They don't like your lot too much either nowadays....
 
let Bilal billi to vent. Their country buys all in all 3000 new cars in a year. I am guessing even papa new guinea buys more. He is just a frustrated lungi. That's all.

Look my little kanjoosi protester, your kind would $hit their pants if they tried to buy any cars in Bangladesh, even reconditioned ones. Tariff and VAT is 300% on new cars and even 800% on luxury ones like large BMWs and Range Rovers.

I'd like to see Kanjoos Indians having himmat enough to buy one in Bangladesh.

And no one here buys those micro excuses of cars like Maruti 800 and Tata Nano garbage for 3 to 5 lacs. :lol:
 
Nah, go to Bangalore, and Hyderabad or any other rich city in India like South Bombay or South Delhi, supercars are common, in New Delhi a Harley Davidson is a very common sight.

While Bangalore is full with expensive cars.

I imagine it’s very warm in South Bombay
 
Of cos best selling becos how many Indian buys EV and how many EV foreign brand do India government allow to enter India market?

Just like micromax smartphone story. :enjoy:

In Bangladesh we make (not just assemble, manufacture) almost 75% of our local smartphones, which includes at least half a dozen local brands. Many brands add locally made circuit boards, screens, batteries and other value-added components.

Like everything else made in India, Indian cellphones such as Micromax are seen locally in Bangladesh as low end garbage, which are smuggled in locally because of Indian border agent collusion. Still no one buys any.

Micromax is screwed together by the way from imported sub-assemblies from outside India. Even the circuit boards for Micromax aren't made locally (not populated with SMD components in India).
 

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