datasheets.com EBN.com EDN.com EETimes.com Embedded.com PlanetAnalog.com TechOnline.com  
Events
UBM Tech
UBM Tech

News & Analysis

Comment


videoguru

11/23/2010 2:32 AM EST

Your article is without merit

Who does your legal due diligence on ...

More...



Sanjib.Acharya

10/23/2010 2:40 PM EDT

I would like to know how many of those ideas did Catamaran consider worth ...

More...

‘Ideas’ could be India’s next growth industry

Sufia Tippu

10/10/2010 1:46 AM EDT

IT and beyond
The seeds of India’s rise as an IT power were planted in the 1980s, when conglomerates Tata Consultancy Services and Wipro zeroed in on the software business and Infosys opened its doors. Several hundred startups followed in their footsteps, but only a few have stood out from the pack in terms of patented innovations. They include Cosmic Circuits in power management, Ittiam in DSP applications, MindTree in communications products, Subex in operations support systems and Tejas Networks in the telecom space.

Going forward, India’s best chances to make its mark on innovation may be in cleantech and other disruptive technologies that can improve the quality of life for the world’s poor while enriching their inventors and investors. One such invention along that vein, a low-cost, durable, prosthesis known as the Jaipur foot, has restored function to amputees the world over and is probably the best-known Indian innovation to have found a global market.

Other recent inventions that hold similar promise include:

• A hybrid electric/kerosene stove that saves 70 percent on fuel costs compared with conventional stoves that burn liquefied petroleum gas. The stove uses a 6-V coil to heat kerosene for cooking. One liter of kerosene lasts for eight hours, and the stove consumes one unit of electrical power for every 20 hours of use.

• Mitti Cool, the so-called village fridge. Invented by a potter, Mitti Cool is made from special clay (mitti) and uses evaporation to cool three or more storage chambers for water, fruits and vegetables.

• Modified lanterns that produce light equal to a 100-watt bulb but run on kerosene, diesel or ethanol. The lamp has a wick coated with high-temperature materials, such as silica; a self-cleaning nozzle; and a special glass that reduces the chances of explosion.

• A diesel motorcycle that doubles as a tractor when the back wheel is removed and replaced with a spiked cylinder.

• A micro-windmill-based mobile charger that uses wind power to charge phones and laptops.

Chances are, the creators of these inventions weren’t thinking far beyond their own needs or those of their nearest neighbors when they devised their novel solutions to commonplace problems. Few probably dared to hope they would grab the attention of the Indian market at large, much less the global marketplace. They weren’t looking for what the late management guru C.K. Prahlad called “the fortune at the bottom of the pyramid.”

But others are.







Dave.Dykstra

10/11/2010 12:45 PM EDT

It seems reasonable and only a matter of time until we see many new and innovative solutions from India. Probably there will be a mixture of ideas with some aimed at consumers in the rest of the world (US, Europe, China, Japan, etc.), and some aimed specifically at the consumer in India. This will depend on the mindset of the individual/company and their particular focus. Of course, there will be many ideas that will apply to both, although in many instances they will probably require a different implementation due to factors such as infrastructure differences, etc.

Sign in to Reply



MangoAndApple

10/11/2010 4:31 PM EDT

thoughtful article.

Sign in to Reply



Luis Sanchez

10/11/2010 5:01 PM EDT

I just had a talk with Ramesh (good guy) and he showed me how the indian government played a strong role in the empowerment of the Indian nation as the where to go for software development.
Today, the way things are in the IT industry show that it has all been brewed since years ago, "we learned programming since 8 grade..." he mentioned... perhaps if the government continues on the track to innovation, in some years from now we will surely see the creation of wealth lean to the that side of the globe. What do you think?

Sign in to Reply



Sheetal.Pandey

10/13/2010 4:43 PM EDT

Well you are correct. The government does support software growth. But I guess the diversities are too much to concentrate on few things. But with so many diversities still things are shaping up very well.

Sign in to Reply



Charles.Desassure

10/11/2010 8:48 PM EDT

Thank you for your article. Hats off to India and its engineers for wanting to be creative and branch off with their own technology. That’s good! India’s need to know that we support them and any great idea to enhance technology. If there’s a market, people will buy their product.

Sign in to Reply



kari

10/11/2010 11:24 PM EDT

Venture guys, if you want both the brain and cheap intelligent labor force to realize your financial dreams, just go over the Himalayas to realize your dream. This is the high time to invest there.

Sign in to Reply



hm

10/12/2010 12:26 AM EDT

Indian firms may be very effective in modifying and adapting to the proven ideas from developed countries. However, we are yet to see many major conceptual products or basic ideas from India. Second aspect is quality and reliability of this new ideas and concept in successful products. It takes very hard work and long time to create quality product from basic conceptual idea. We are yet to see them from India. India has very hard work to do make their name in world market for new ideas.

Sign in to Reply



Chak K

10/12/2010 12:26 AM EDT

"70 percent of the population of 1.2 billion still scrapes by on half a dollar a day" looks hard to belive, especially considering that more than 20% of population is in tier1 and tier2 cities. Is this information latest? Can you quote the source?

Sign in to Reply



hareesh_asic

10/12/2010 12:29 AM EDT

Thank you for your article. i agree with Mr.Kondamoori. The Innoations in high-end technologies like VLSI are remain unrealized due to the lack of Manufacturing units.

Sign in to Reply



prabhakar_deosthali

10/12/2010 1:49 AM EDT

Just imitating west cannot bring out the real innovations from Indian minds. For centuries the Indian mind set has been following west be it a new technology, literature, art, theater or movies. Even in IT where Indian manpower has now spread across the world, it is only helping those American, German or Japanese companies in developing their innovative ideas into products. So the India IT industry has become service-centric and not product centric. All those design houses in Bangalore and hyderabad and Pune are also helping those giants like Oracle, Microsoft, TI, Intel to convert their original ideas into products. The day will written with golden letters when Indians will develop original products out of their own innovative ideas which could be in a radically different application domain, not just a cheap PC but may be a radically different medicines to fight all these new viral diseases. not just a super computer doing the same binary arithmetic faster but may be a new mathematical model .For these Indian minds need to go deep into their own age old knowledge base hidden in Vedas and such other literature and use their innovative minds to marry the old with the technology available from west

Sign in to Reply



Dr Raman

10/12/2010 5:27 AM EDT

Innovations in India are not a new phenomenon and, it only lacks due recognition. Despite 800 years of oppressive foreign rule, India progressed very well in the last 63 years since Independence and is not a minor achievement. However, the mistake India is doing now is to repeat the same mistakes that west has done in the past. All the developed countries are on the forefront damaging the environment despite having few environmental policies, now India & China are also trying to harm the environment more in the name of development. They must tread a different path in terms of technology (eco-friendly), economic model (not greedy capitalism) and Social model (based on moral values).

Sign in to Reply



Janakiram

10/12/2010 6:44 AM EDT

I agree with Dr.Raman. There is immense potential in India for innovation. Need of the hour is to focus more on sustainable, both locally & internationally relevant innovation. These need to be followed up with due recognition by Industry leaders and the Government.

Sign in to Reply



nicolas.mokhoff

10/12/2010 7:33 AM EDT

It's a great update on India's development of a home-grown hi-tech industry. I wonder what the percentage of Indian engineers and entrepreneurs who received their education in the West then went back to innovative and invest in their home country. And what has been the success rate for these ex-pats. Also, are there enough university research centers in India to sustain a permanent flow of hi-tech innovations.

Sign in to Reply



CHATLIT

10/12/2010 10:31 AM EDT

This has reference to Jayant Deosthali and hm's comments.Truly,the answer lies in Indians identifying conveniences peculiar to Indian habits and finding solutions.Indians prefer to be secretive and perhaps there are several good ideas are left in somebody's computer memory.Somehow Indians at Policy making levels tend to get carried away by the products which claim to be state of art with slick presentations and are of utility to a miniscule section of society.

Sign in to Reply



elctrnx_lyf

10/12/2010 1:06 PM EDT

@Nic_Mchoff --- There is not even 10% of engineers coming back to India after completeing their master degree in west. This is mainly due to majority of people in India are brought up with poor facilities around them and made to think to have a better luxurious life as the only ambition. Certainly there will be people with good ambitions and they will thin little more than me too attitude and many enterprenures.

Sign in to Reply



elctrnx_lyf

10/12/2010 1:07 PM EDT

cond ... will be there to take risk and think the future.

Sign in to Reply



iniewski

10/12/2010 3:23 PM EDT

I will be a little contrarian here...why bother with innovation when you can make billions by copying and doing stuff cheaper??? Worked for Taiwan, now is working for China...Kris

Sign in to Reply



Sheetal.Pandey

10/13/2010 4:47 PM EDT

well then one can be only one part of the business. When you innovate, you bring more business options.

Sign in to Reply



goafrit

10/12/2010 4:16 PM EDT

India has the brains and as Economist said this week, they will overtake China. That nation has good the education right, innovation will follow.

Sign in to Reply



goafrit

10/12/2010 4:26 PM EDT

Developing nations like India must find a spot on this planet by moving into technology areas where they can differentiate. Frugal engineering, alternative sources of energy where local raw materials are available, etc, will make all the differences. Going to compete with IBM on the fastest computer will not work. Great article.

Sign in to Reply



Sheetal.Pandey

10/13/2010 4:50 PM EDT

Almost all mutinational comapnies have there presence in India. Due to the growing market. But I guess India has to work with diversities issues and make development the only goal. Which is easier to say but difficult to achieve. But yes the article brings out the innovations in minds of young Indians. And surely there are many more but could not see the light because they cannot reach the mainstream media.

Sign in to Reply



Sanjib.Acharya

10/23/2010 2:40 PM EDT

I would like to know how many of those ideas did Catamaran consider worth investing in? Great to know about "lot of confidence and enthusiasm" to generate ideas. I had a feeling that in India many brilliant students don't get a chance to choose their career based on what they love to do, but rather it depends on what opportunity they get. There are lots of opportunities in IT. I've seen many students good in electronics choosing IT as their career not because they love IT as their profession, but because they got recruited by one of many IT farms visiting their institute. I think better ideas could get generated by the engineers who love their domain of work. India is doing good in IT but I doubt about other sectors including electronics. Indian Govt. needs to help supporting those sectors. Also India must have better infrastructure (better manufacturing facilities) to support implementation of good ideas.

Sign in to Reply



videoguru

11/23/2010 2:32 AM EST

Your article is without merit

Who does your legal due diligence on Sandalwood Partners and Bob Kondamoori
the fella is a fake with "NO FUND" in India, check with the SEBI here and has duped investors millions in India. His CFO (Ajay Jalan) and him are embroiled in an internal rape charge here in Bangalore, India

make your queries and do not believe a word this crook has to say

http://www.deccanherald.com/content/94600/company-cfo-rapes-woman-two.html

previously duped investor

Sign in to Reply



Please sign in to post comment

Navigate to related information

Datasheets.com Parts Search

185 million searchable parts
(please enter a part number or hit search to begin)