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Showing posts with label Indian Goverment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Indian Goverment. Show all posts

Sunday, 26 October 2014

Gartner Predicts Positive Modi Effect On e-India

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Prime minister narendra Modi’s much-hailed ‘Digital India’ initiative, which earned a vote of confidence from Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg (who met the PM in early October) is expected to boost the government’s IT spending by 5 percent to $7.2 billion in 2015, estimates technology research firm Gartner.

A chunk of these expenses is expected to be incurred in the revving up of external IT services and telecommunications, the development of broadband and cloud-based initiatives, and the creation of digitally-governed smart cities across the country.

Anurag Gupta, research director, Gartner, said in a statement, “The delivery of a citizen-centric and transparent government is only possible through the extensive use of technology and by leveraging digital government.”

Gartner also identified the top strategic technology trends for 2015 in its report. It defines “strategic trends” as those that are likely to have a significant impact on an organisation for the next three years and have “a high potential for disruption of the business [for both end users and IT] and the need for a major investment”.

Gartner analyst David Cearley noted that “the merging of the real and virtual worlds, the advent of intelligence everywhere, and the technology impact of the digital business shift” will define tech in the coming year.

Some of the trends to watch out for are:
  • Computing everywhere with the rise of handheld devices
  • Rise of 3D printing
  • Advanced analytics with every app becoming an ‘analytic app’
  • Convergence of cloud and mobile computing
  • Growth of ‘smart machines’ in which advanced algorithms will allow systems to understand their environment, learn for themselves, and act autonomously
  • Advent of ‘web-scale IT’, a pattern of computing that delivers the capabilities of large cloud service providers within an enterprise IT setting
  • Risk-based security and self-protection

Friday, 17 October 2014

Flipkart After Sale Effect: ED Probing FDI Violations Rules In E-Commerce

  Enforcement directorate (ED) on Tuesday said it has not launched any probe into the massive discount sale by e-retail giant Flipkart last week but is continuing its earlier investigation into alleged violations of FDI rules in their e-commerce business. 

Refuting media reports that the recent online mega sale of Flipkart was being probed, an ED official said there is no truth in such media reports. 

In the wake of complaints from huge number of customers regarding alleged predatory prices on goods and unfair trade practices adopted by Flipkart, commerce and industry minister Nirmala Sitharaman had last week acknowledged that government had received complaints in this regard.

"We have received many inputs. Lot of concerns have been expressed. We will look into it," Sitharaman had told reporters here. 

Flipkart's 'Big Billion Day' online sale took place on October 6. 

A Flipkart spokesperson while reacting to the media reports said, "We are in complete compliance with the laws of the land and will cooperate with authorities when required." 

The ED, however, is probing allegations that Flipkart and other such e-retail companies violated the foreign direct investment (FDI) norms of e-commerce sector. 

As per the current policy, FDI is not allowed in domestic e-commerce companies conducting B2C (business-to-consumer) transactions while 100 per cent foreign investment is permitted in B2B (business-to-business).

Oracle Slapped With Bribery Charge In India

 Oracle India looks to be in the middle of yet another bribery issue, and multiple sources told TOI that Sandeep Mathur's sudden exit as managing director of the company is linked to this.

Mathur quit soon after returning from an Oracle conference in San Francisco earlier this month. Shailender Kumar, group VP of key accounts for Oracle India, has taken over as interim MD. 

This is the second such episode for Oracle in India. Two years ago, the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) had filed a complaint against Oracle alleging that the company's Indian subsidiary had possibly indulged in bribery or embezzlement. Oracle agreed to pay a $2 million penalty to settle the SEC's charges.

The latest concerns have allegedly been triggered by compliance issues arising from a database contract that Oracle had won from the Andhra Pradesh police department a few years back. TOI has learnt that the issue came to light when an anonymous whistleblower wrote an email to Oracle alleging that one of its channel partners violated its contract norms to win the contract. Sources said that action may be taken against several Oracle India officials. 

TOI sent a mail to Oracle detailing the charges being made, but the company said it would not comment on the matter. 

Mathur was responsible for multiple lines of business: technology, applications, systems and Fusion Middleware as well as driving growth across public sector and key accounts. Prior to his role as MD, he was VP of technology at Oracle India. Mathur joined Oracle in 2003 as director of Oracle Direct, North America sales. 

In the previous SEC investigation, it was found that Oracle India secretly parked with distributors a portion of the proceeds from certain sales to the Indian government and put the money to unauthorized use, creating the potential for bribery or embezzlement. Oracle India's distributors allegedly held approximately $2.2 million of the proceeds in unauthorized side funds. 

The SEC alleged that Oracle India employees would then direct its distributors to disburse payments out of the unauthorized side funds to purported local "vendors." "Several of the 'vendors' were merely storefronts that did not provide any services. Oracle failed to accurately record these side funds on the company's books and records, and failed to implement or maintain a system of effective internal accounting controls to prevent improper side funds in violation of the FCPA, which requires public companies to keep books and records that accurately reflect their operations," SEC said. 

Several MNCs operating in India have over the years been investigated for violation of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) of the US that bars bribing officials of foreign governments. Following such an investigation of Walmart in Mexico, the retailer initiated an investigation in 2012 into allegations of bribery in its India unit. Several executives in the India unit were suspended and some quit.

Sunday, 14 September 2014

Difficult to do business in India, says Vodafone

 Vodafone, the world's second-largest telecom service provider by subscribers, said Thursday that slow government clearances had made it difficult for foreign companies to do business in India, even as the company continues to face taxation issues in the country. 

The UK-based telco, which has invested about $20 billion in India, said the Indian government should accelerate the decision-making process and facilitate mark consolidation to improve the sector, which has been reeling under spectrum constraints. Vodafone India head Marten Pieters said the company had sought the government's approval in December last year to bring in funds from the parent company to buy airwaves and is still awaiting the clearances. He added that spectrum availability remains a key challenge. 

"Industry structure is government's responsibility and it should make available more quantum of spectrum," he said at The Economist's India summit. In China, telecom companies are regulated and three players invested $50 billion in networks there last year. Comparatively, India put in only 10 per cent of that amount in its networks. Pieters said in India, spectrum availability is not on a par with international markets such as the US and the scarcity of airwaves is causing hurdles such as low voice quality. If the new government sets the conditions right, private industry can invest a lot more in the country and that could mitigate the general perception that doing business is India is difficult. 

Pieters added that Vodafone India plans to raise equity as a lot of money goes into the purchase of spectrum. The company, which is caught in a Rs 20,000-crore tax tangle is awaiting a nod from the authorities for the equity sale. The sector regulator had proposed rules on spectrum sharing and trading but the telecom department is yet to take a final decision, Vodafone India's top executive remarked. Concepts such as the Digital India programme, financial inclusion and smart cities are close to the company's operations, he added.

Sunday, 31 August 2014

IITs to offer ‘deferred placements’ to students who choose entrepreneurship as career

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MUMBAI: Giving in to popular demand from graduating students smitten with entrepreneurship, a clutch of IITs across the country has decided to offer 'deferred placements' to students who would rather float a new business than sit for a job interview now.

As many as 13 students from the Class of 2015 at IIT-Bombay have applied for deferred placements this year to pursue entrepreneurial ventures. Of these, eight are planning for-profit ventures and five are going for social ventures. The institute is likely to choose 10 from among the 13. It had toyed with deferred placements last year when only one student applied, but the idea has found takers only this year.

IIT-Madras, also encouraged by student demand, is rolling out deferred placements for the first time this year. IIT-Kanpur has also been considering the same. IIT Guwahati General Secretary (placement cell) Manish Arora expects at least 7-8 students to opt for deferred placements this year compared with 2-4 last year.

Deferred placements, as the name suggests, enables students to defer placements by a year or two to start their own ventures. They can come back and seek campus placement if their ventures fail.

They are quite popular at top IIMs, but are gaining traction in IITs only this year. Such initiatives help spur the appetite for entrepreneurship and risk-taking among young graduates at the country's premier engineering institutes. 

Students are excited about entrepreneurship even though the job market is picking up once again. This year, companies such as Goldman Sachs, Amazon and eBay are offering salaries that are 20% to 40% higher than last year.

"The number of students interested in pursuing entrepreneurial activities post graduation has gone up tremendously," says Mohak Mehta, placement manager at IIT-Bombay. "By opting for deferred placement, a student is assured of a Plan B which acts as a safety net in case he fails to succeed in his venture."

MalegaoClutch of IITs to offer ‘deferred placements’ to students who choose entrepreneurship over a careern boy Abhijit Patil needed the deferred placement option to convince his parents to let him give entrepreneurship a shot. IITBombay's Patil and his two friends run a 3D printing and scanning business. 

Patil and his partners have been conducting workshops and providing 3D printing services to IIT-B professors and students for the past few months, and have already broken even on their initial investment of about Rs 4 lakh. 

"I come from a small town and both my parents are teachers, so entrepreneurship after engineering college isn't the most common route," he says. "Knowing that I had the option to come back for placements gave me — and my parents — the courage." At least 15-20 students at IIT-Madras are interested in startups, says Vishranth Suresh, academic affairs secretary. 

"We have had 7-8 students whose ventures didn't take off as expected. They had approached us to sit for placements later. We didn't have apolicy in place then, which is why we want one now," he says. At IIT-Bombay, Mahesh Rathore and Greeshma Unnikrishnan, both second-year MTech students, plan to produce novel biomedical devices. Dual-degree student Vaibhav Antil and six friends are working on a modern approach to the traditional Jukebox 


.भारत Domain Name Launched

 The government today launched a new domain .भारत (dot Bharat) in Devanagari script. Initially, the domain will cover eight languages - Hindi, Bodo, Dogri, Konkani, Maithili, Marathi, Nepali and Sindhi. All these languages are from the list of 22 languages registered in the Eighth Schedule of the Constitution. 

The main purpose of .भारत domain is to connect people with social media and provide content in Indian languages. It will help provide information to the general public in their own regional languages. 

The domain was launched by Union Communication and Information Technology Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad. 

The domain was developed by the joint efforts of National Internet Exchange of India and the Centre for Development of Advanced Computing. 

The new domain would replace the commonly used domains like .com, .in, .net and others. This would also soon be followed by similar launches in regional languages like Tamil, Gujarati, Punjabi, Urdu, Telugu and Bangala.

Saturday, 30 August 2014

Hyderabad may become India‘s first fully Wi-Fi-enabled city


In a bid to make Hyderabad the first fully Wi-Fi-enabled metro in the country, Telangana government is holding talks with various telecom service providers to offer the services. 

The state's information technology minister KT Rama Rao told reporters here that steps are being taken to offer Wi-Fi services across greater Hyderabad metropolitan area.

"We are taking a leaf out of cities like Mountain View and Houston for offering Wi-Fi services. We are speaking to service providers," he said, adding that they are also looking at Ahmedabad and Bangalore where Wi-Fi services are available on a limited basis. 

Asked whether any time line has been set for it, Rao said they are working to have it at the earliest but no deadline has been fixed as yet. 

Hyderabad city, which has a population 12 million, is one of the major IT hubs in the country. "We want to offer Wi-Fi services to enable more citizen services," he said.

Friday, 29 August 2014

IITs to offer internships to Engineering Grads with 8k as stipend


ImageIn a move prompted by PM Narendra Modi’s call for integration of northeastern states, the Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs) have now collectively proposed to offer internships and exposure trips meant exclusively for students of this region.
The premier engineering schools made a presentation to PM Modi and HRD Minister Smriti Irani last week in which they proposed to host 2,016 schools students from NE on their campuses during vacation and also offer internships to 250 college students for a monthly stipend of Rs8,000. The presentation was made by director of IIT Guwahati Guatam Biswas.
imageIITs to offer internships, exposure trips to Northeastern students”There is an imbalance between the educational facilities available in the NE and the rest of the country. Students here not aware of the opportunities in higher education and therefore lack the ambition to succeed. The proposal made on behalf of the IITs is aimed at helping them spend time at the country’s best institutes to hone their approach to academics and life,” said an IIT director, who did not wish
IITs to offer internships, exposure trips to Northeastern studentsto be identified.
Integration of NE states is one of the thrust areas of the HRD Ministry and the programme has been proposed by the IITs at the behest of Irani. “In June, the minister had asked the IITs to come up with a proposal for NE students. This is a stop-gap measure till the government can improve the education standards in the region,” said a government officer.
Under Ishaan Vikaas, the 16 IITs and 5 Indian Institute of Science Education and Research (IISERs ) will host 2,016 students of classes IX and XI selected from 504 schools (63 schools from each of the seven states) in one academic year.

Tuesday, 26 August 2014

Government to spend about Rs 69500 crore on IT and Telecom


NEW DELHI: Government will initially spend Rs 69,524 crore on various IT and telecom projects under the 'Digital India' programme.

The government has identified broadband and mobile networks as key growth pillars under Digital India.

An official document shows that NDA government has enhanced expenditure on broadband network to connect all 2.5 lakh village panchayats to Rs 32,000 crore.

The UPA government had approved Rs 20,000 crore for the project. Simultaneously, it has also advanced deadline to finish roll out of national optical fibre network (NOFN) by a quarter to December 2016 from earlier announced date of March 2017.

To provide mobile connectivity to approximately 42,300 villages that still don't have any network coverage, the government has earmarked Rs 16,000 crore. The mobile connectivity in all of these unconnected villages has to be provided by 2018.

The government has decided to create national information infrastructure at a cost of Rs 15,686 crore. The project will include integration of existing programme like the National Knowledge Network and and NOFN.

Under the National Rural Internet Mission, government has earmarked fund of Rs 4,750 crore to make roll out Common Service Centres (CSCs) across 2.5 lakh villages.

Through CSCs people in rural area get access to government services like birth certificate, train tickets, pay various fees etc without actually having to visit concerned office. The CSCs are present at about 1.3 lakh locations.

Besides this government has earmarked Rs 200 crore to train 1 crore students in small towns and villages for IT sector jobs over period of next 5 years.

UPA government had started National Knowledge Network to connect 1,500 universities with high speed broadband network. The NDA government has decided to provide wifi at all universities in the country with estimated cost of Rs 790 crore by end of next year.

Under Digital India programme, government has decided to spend Rs 98 crore on secure email, which will now be primary mode of communications, for official communications.

At present 10 lakh government employees have been moved to secure email communication and by March 2015 around 50 lakh employees will be moved on to the new system.

The Union Cabinet on Wednesday approved the digital India programme that deal with all projects involving IT and communication technology like e-governance and broadband connectivity. The initial cost of the project, to be implemented over the next five years, is estimated at Rs 1,13,000 crore.

The Digital India programme has various other provisions which include wifi hotspots at public places, ebooks for schools, national portal for lost and found children, biometric attendance at government offices for which funds are yet to be finalised.

Saturday, 23 August 2014

IT networking companies banking on Narendra Modis Digital India plan


MUMBAI: IT networking related companies were in limelight on hopes of getting big orders following Prime Minister Narendra Modi's Digital India programme.

The cabinet on Wednesday approved the ambitious Digital India programme that aims to connect all gram panchayats by broadband internet, promote e-governance and transform India into a connected knowledge economy.

The Programme, which would be implemented in a phased manner by 2019, is estimated to cost about Rs 113,000 crore, including ongoing schemes being run by the telecom department and Department of Electronics and Information Technology (DeitY), as well as on new schemes.

"Digital India is a program to prepare India for a knowledge future," says a presentation on the program to the cabinet by DeitY. "The focus is on making technology central to enabling change".

At 02:00 p.m.; CMC was at Rs 1,921, up 2.95 per cent, on the BSE. It surged 5 per cent to touch intraday high of Rs 1,960.50.

Sterlite Technologies was at Rs 60.35, up 4.96 per cent, on the BSE. It rallied 5.06 per cent to touch intradat high of Rs 60.35.

D-link was at Rs 98.95, up 2.91 per cent, on the BSE. It moved up 1.45 per cent to touch intraday high of Rs 104.30.

Vakrangee was at Rs 133.90, up 2.92 per cent, on the BSE. It touched advanced 6.45 per cent to touch intraday high of Rs 138.50.

Friday, 22 August 2014

DoT to soon come out with policy on Internet of Things

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DoT is likely to come out with a policy structure on Internet of Things by the end of this fiscal.

NEW DELHI: The Department of Telecom (DoT) is likely to come out with a policy structure on Internet of Things by the end of this fiscal.
"We are working on the policy side of IoT technology for the past eight months and it is likely to come out within this financial year," a source in DoT said.
The source added that the Telecommunication Engineering Centre (TEC), an unit of DoT, is working on framing the standards for M2M communications, or Internet of things, but its not certain by when the final standards will be out.

The source added that sectoral regulator Trai's recommendations may not be required for framing the policy.
The initiative is part of 'Digital India' programme wherein the DoT is responsible for infrastructure development and e-governance.
Expressing the government's resolve to move towards the goal of 'Digital India', prime minister Narendra Modi in his speech on August 15 had underlined the need for using information technology to improve governance and spread education and medical facilities.
According to the Ericsson Mobility Report for 2014, globally the number of active cellular IoT devices will increase 3-4 times by 2019, from 200 million at the end of 2013.
"We see cellular IoT taking off. Over time, cellular M2M services and applications related to, for example, intelligent transport systems, will require very short latency in order to be efficient. By 2019, we estimate that more than 20% of the active cellular M2M devices will be connected to LTE subscriptions," Ericsson said

Thursday, 21 August 2014

Election Commission of India to launch video game to generate awareness among teenagers

election-commission-to-launch-video-game-to-generate-awareness-among-children The Election Commission of India (ECI) is expected to launch a video game to generate awareness among teenagers and planning to tap first-time voters in the 18-19 age group, as per an Economic Times report. According to Akshay Rout, director general of the Election Commission, said, “The video game, designed with the creat ive inputs of SPAN Communications and financial support of United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), will be launched later this year.”
Initially, the video game is expected to be available on e-kiosks at airports and offices or it can be downloaded from the poll panel’s website. ECI is also planning to make the game available on mobile phones.
“The EC believes in starting early when it comes to creating awareness about elections and voting. We are coming up with some ‘edutainment’ material for children and teenagers along with UNDP. The video game will be launched as part of this initiative,” Akshay told ET.
There are ten levels in this game and each level has a theme such as voter registration or eligibility and players have to find their way through a maze to a door for going to the next level.
“During this journey, whenever the player earns a point by collecting a prized fruit or item, tidbits of information about the electoral process will pop up on the screen,” said an EC official who is not authorised to speak on behalf of the poll panel. 
The poll panel’s plan to target children and youngsters is not limited to gaming. It also plans to approach the Modi government to press for inclusion of electoral awareness content in NCERT history and civics textbooks.

Tuesday, 19 August 2014

Dot Bharat domain to be unveiled on August 21


NEW DELHI: Web addresses are set to get multilingual in India. Soon you will be able to type in addresses in a web browser in the Devnagri script - with "dot bharat" standing in for the currently common "dot in" domain to begin with. The roll-out of the same begins on August 21. 

In the 90-day "sunrise period" of the roll-out those with registered trademarks will be able to register domain names in languages that use the Devnagri script, such as Hindi, Marathi, Boro, Dogri etc. After the sunrise period, it will be thrown open to regular users of the internet. 

The National Internet Exchange of India (NIXI), an autonomous non-profit organisation, is responsible for peering of ISPs and routing the domestic traffic within the country. The NIXI and the government's Centre for Development of Advanced Computing (C-DAC) have worked on enabling this country code top level domain (ccTLD) of dot bharat. They say more such domains in different scripts and languages will eventually follow. 

Currently, one can find content in various languages online. However, the URLs or web addresses are in English. With this rollout, even URLs would be in Hindi or Marathi. "Once the sunrise period runs smoothly, we will introduce other languages in other scripts such as Bengali, Punjabi, Kannada, Telugu etc. There is no timeline set for it yet, but we hope there will be enough pressure with the adoption of the Devnagri domains to implement it soon," says Mahesh Kulkarni, program coordinator at the C-DAC, heading the language technology group. 

A few government websites too will be a part of the launch next week by the union minister of communications and information technology, Ravi Shankar Prasad. "For example, the pmindia dot gov dot in will be pradhanmantri dot sarkar dot bharat," says Dr Govind, CEO of NIXI. 

While some quarters have welcomed the introduction of the new domain, others are doubtful of its success given the low internet penetration and low literacy rate in the country. A June 2014 report from research firm eMarketer, India had the third largest online user-base globally after China and the US but had the lowest internet penetration growth in Asia Pacific at 17.4%. Osama Manzar, who heads the Digital Empowerment Foundation, suggests getting more people and public institutions online rolling out local language domain names. 

"This is not a bad move, but I doubt and wonder if it will encourage people to buy domain names in Indian languages. Is it in sync with the national digital infrastructure? It is important that the government encourage every department and village panchayat to get online with a website along with this," says Manzar. 

Sahitya Akademi-winning Hindi writer Uday Prakash finds the Devnagri domain a welcome move, but stresses on the importance of making quality content in regional languages available online. "It's a good step and will help those who are not comfortable with English. However, the problem remains that most of the content online is in English. If I search for Robin Williams in English, I will find hundreds of webpages. But if I google the same name in Devnagri, I'll hardly find anything," says Prakash. 

On the other hand, there is also the view that the move towards a multilingual web need not follow a set path. "If a poor person buys a mobile phone before he build a toilet, who are we to judge? It is a market phenomenon. Like a jigsaw, some pieces of the puzzle may be worked out in advance. There are things like Indic input keyboards, text to speech and speech to text that need to be in place before an Indic language speaker can have the same experience as an English language user of the internet," says Sunil Abraham, executive director of Bangalore-based research organization Center for Internet and Society. 

In October 2013, the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) delegated generic top level domains in Arabic, Chinese and Cyrillic scripts. This was under the Internationalized Domain Name (IDN) fast track process of the ICANN, which began in 2009, inviting requests from countries for territory names in scripts other than Latin. Meanwhile domestically, the union government has made a push for the use of local languages.

PM Narendra Modi calls for Digital India to improve governance

  NEW DELHI: Expressing the government's resolve to move towards the goal of 'Digital India', Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Friday underlined the need for using information technology to improve governance and spread education and medical facilities.

"Youth belonging to the IT profession have paved the way for establishing India's new identity in the world. Digital India is our dream for the nation. When I say 'digital India' it is not meant for the rich but for those who are poor,"he said in first speech from ramparts of Red Fort here.

The Prime Minister said if the villages could be connected with broadband, education could be provided to children in even the last school and telemedicine facilities could greatly help the poor.

Referring to greater use of mobile phones to improve the delivery system, Modi said the facility could be used by the poor to operate bank accounts, seek benefits of government schemes and run businesses.

Modi said that his government's resolve is to work towards Digital India for providing information and services to the people in a timely and effective manner.

He said if "we move with the dream of electronic digital India, manufacturing of electronic goods and become self-reliant", it will be a major gain for the country.

Referring to e-governance, he said e-governance is "easy governance, effective governance and economical governance".

"E-governance is way to good governance...There was a time when it was said that Railway unites the country. I say, today IT has the power to unite the country and its people," the Prime Minister added.

Cisco CEO John Chambers thinks Prime Minister Narendra Modi can "turnaround" India


NEW DELHI: Amid gloom over flat forecasts and job cuts, if there is one arena that is looking up for Cisco-it is India. Networking giant Cisco announced in its quarterly results today its intention to cut down 6000 jobs as the company struggles to sustain growth.

Most of Cisco's woes are related to the dismal, mostly negative growth in some key emerging markets. Two key markets where it suffered was China, where product orders fell 23 per cent, and Brazil, which faced a decline of 13 per cent 

India, as a market, however, has bucked that trend for Cisco. India grew at a healthy 18 per cent for the company, even as the remaining emerging countries in Asia actually declined 34% (excluding China and India). Cisco's overall APJ business was down by 7 per cent. 

"We saw the impact of economic and geopolitical challenges in China, Brazil, Russia, Argentina, Turkey, and Thailand and in a number of emerging markets that many of other peers are seeing. These declines are reducing our growth by several points from what was expected and typically seen. Unfortunately as we look out we don't see emerging markets growth returning for several quarters and believe it possibly could get worst," Chambers said during the earnings call. 

Chambers however, displayed great enthusiasm around Cisco's prospects in India. "There are some bright spots for the first time in a while. I think Modi in India is going to turnaround that country. You can see the enthusiasm both the citizens and the businesses there are betting on a single emerging market. I would bet on India right now in a big way." 

Cisco's high-end routers and switches declined 7 per cent and 4 per cent year-over-year, respectively, as customers were slow to order a new series of products. Its data center revenues rose 30 per cent, and security sector revenues rose 29 per cent. Cisco posted a smaller-than-expected 0.5 per cent dip in fiscal fourth-quarter revenue to $12.4 billion. 

Chambers recently visited India and is said to have held high-level talks with the Modi government around opportunities in the country. Chambers has also been vocal about Cisco's keen interest in exploring the smart cities opportunity in India. FM Arun Jaitely announced Rs. 7060 crore for development of smart cities in his maiden budget speech in July 2014. 

Thursday, 14 August 2014

Telecom Minister to unveil dot Bharat domain name

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Minister of Communications and IT Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad will be unveiling the dot Bharat domain name on August 21 in New Delhi to facilitate multi-lingual Internet access, NIXI chief executive Dr Govind told ET.
The autonomous body National Internet Exchange of India (NIXI) and the Centre for Development of Advanced Computing (C-DAC) will be enabling dot Bharat ccTLD that can be registered in Devnagari scripts such as Nepali, Marathi, Konkani, Bodo and Maithili.
The International Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers ( ICANN) has consigned the Internationalized Domain Name (IDN) in seven Indian languages to the NIXI.
C-DAC is also closely working with NIXI and they have jointly constituted a committee on International Domain Names (IDNs) to introduce domain names in local languages such as Bengali, Punjabi, Gujrati, Tamil and Urdu sometime soon, the body said.
Internationalized Domain Name in Indian language will be represented in local language characters. Such domain names could contain letters or characters from non-ASCII scripts.
ASCII or American Standard Code for Information Interchange is a character-encoding scheme based on the ordering of the English alphabet.
In India, the INRegistry has been mandated for registering, operating and managing IDN in the Indian languages.
The number of Internet subscribers stood at 238.71 million in December 2013, while Himachal Pradesh with 2.04 million, had the lowest number of Internet users, telecom and IT minister Ravi Shankar Prasad recently informed Lok Sabha.
The domain name in the Indian languages is expected to boost Internet penetration and eventually accelerate local content delivery and related services in India's rural and remote areas.

Wednesday, 13 August 2014

Nine reasons why India's WTO veto shocked the world

GENEVA (Reuters) - India's tough diplomacy blocked a landmark world trade treaty late on Thursday, despite last-ditch talks to rescue what would have been the first global trade reform since the creation of the World Trade Organization 19 years ago.
Trade diplomats in Geneva have said they are "flabbergasted", "astonished" and "dismayed" and described India's position as "hostage-taking" and "suicidal". Here are nine reasons why they say India's stance made no sense.
1. India has been a vocal backer of world trade reform. It has criticised the small clubs of countries, led by the United States and European Union, that lost patience with the slow pace of global reforms and started to discuss faster liberalising of trade in certain areas, such as services and information technology products. India is not in any of these groups. But Thursday's veto is likely to give them even more momentum as hope of a global trade pact, long in doubt, appears to be over.
2. India's veto may be the beginning of the end for the WTO. Trade experts say that if the WTO's 20-year-old rulebook does not evolve, more and more trade will be governed by new regional agreements such as the Trans-Pacific Partnership, which will have their own rules and systems of resolving disputes. That could lead to a fragmented world of separate trade blocs.
3. India's new government was widely seen as being pro-business. And yet it blocked a deal on "trade facilitation", a worldwide streamlining of customs rules that would cut container handling times, guarantee standard procedures for getting goods to and from their destinations and kill off vast amounts of paperwork at borders around the world. Some estimates said it would add $1 trillion to the world economy as well as 21 million jobs, 18 million of them in developing countries.
4. Nobody else was negotiating. Thursday's meeting was simply supposed to formally adopt the final trade negotiation text into the WTO rulebook, following its agreement by ministers at a meeting in Bali last December. India's then Trade Minister Anand Sharma hailed the Bali deal as a landmark in the history of the WTO. "We were able to arrive at a balanced outcome which secures our supreme national interest," Sharma said at the time. India did not hint at any further objection until days before it wielded its veto, and even then it made no concrete demands until the WTO meeting to adopt the new rules was in progress.
5. India did not object to the deal it vetoed. Its objections were unconnected to trade facilitation. It blocked the trade facilitation deal to try to get what it wanted on something else: food security.
6. India had already got what it wanted on food security. At Bali, it forced a big concession from the United States and European Union, which initially strongly opposed its demands, but agreed that India could stockpile food at subsidised prices, reversing the trend of trying to reduce and remove trade-distorting food subsidies globally. The arrangement was temporary, but the WTO agreed to work towards a permanent solution within four years, by the end of 2017.
7. India's demands reversed its previous position. India blocked the trade facilitation deal because it wanted the WTO to move to a permanent solution more quickly than the four-year timeline. But diplomats say that India was offered a two-year timeframe before Bali but it insisted on four.
8. India's veto could put it in legal danger. As part of the Bali deal, India won a pledge that nobody would bring a trade dispute to challenge its food stockpiling programme, which is widely thought to have broken the WTO rules. However, diplomats say that Bali was a "package" of 10 agreements, and the only legally binding part was trade facilitation. If that fails, the package unravels, and India may lose its protection.
9. India was isolated. Cuba, Venezuela and Bolivia voiced support, but diplomats say other big developing countries such as Russia, China and Brazil, as well as India's neighbour Pakistan, were among the chief opponents of its veto. Poorer countries stand to lose most, WTO chief Roberto Azevedo told the WTO meeting after the deal collapsed. "They’re the ones with fewer options, who are at risk of being left behind. They’re the ones that may no longer have a seat at the table."

Friday, 8 August 2014

5 Money Management Lessons You Can Learn From PM Narendra Modi

 
During the long-drawn election campaign for the recently concluded 16th Lok Sabha polls, India witnessed a proficient orator and an excellent marketer in Narendra Modi who made an impression on every voter in the country and created history by coming to power with a landslide victory. Although the jury is still out on whether he can live up to the expectations of his countrymen, retail investors certainly stand to gain from him.

The gains, so far, have been tangible as the BSE Sensex, the 30-share benchmark index of the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE), has already registered gains of 20% in 2014, compared to 9% gains posted in 2013. But that apart, investors can take away a lesson or two about how to handle their finances from Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

Lesson 1: Adopt a disciplined approach to investments
If there is one thing that Narendra Modi lives by, it is his discipline. Come what may, he is known for never moving away from his disciplined regimen. This is a great thing to learn and emulate from our Prime Minister. As an investor, if you have a systematic and disciplined approach towards investing, your financial goals will seem more achievable. Chalk out an investment plan to meet the financial goals you have in mind and invest accordingly. One way to do it is investing in Systematic Investment Plans or SIPs that help you meet your investment objectives over the long term.

Lesson 2: Do away with the clutter
As soon as Prime Minister Narendra Modi assumed office, he made it clear that he disliked clutter of any sort and thus began the 'cleaning drive' beginning with the babus. The Prime Minister even made it clear that presentations had to be succinct to bring out the important issues to the forefront. Similarly, when it comes to your portfolio, take care to see that it is not a collection of unwieldy investments that are causing the clutter. Ideally, there should not be more than 12-15 stocks in your portfolio. If your portfolio is too large, see whether you require diversification and distribute your investments among various asset classes.

Lesson 3: Underperformers should go
Modi has made it amply clear that he has zero tolerance for slack attitude. Each member of his Cabinet and the babus are to be on their toes and on the top of things. Otherwise, heads will roll, as he has clearly communicated. Your approach should be similar when it comes to the underperformers in your portfolio. Do not keep underperforming stocks in your portfolio forever. And the same holds true for mutual fund schemes. If you find that a scheme is constantly underperforming, compared to its peers as well as the benchmark, for over a year, use the first opportunity to sell out and deploy the funds elsewhere.

Lesson 4: Ears to the ground
For the first time, we have a prime minister who makes his opinion or action clear on any issue of national relevance on the social media platforms. This shows that he is not just tech savvy, but likes to keep himself updated on all minor and major issues of national and international significance. This is a lesson an investor should learn from him. As an investor, you should be cued in to what is happening across the markets and asset classes to ensure that you can take relevant action when it is required.

Lesson 5: Be undeterred when need be
Modi is also known to be a leader who can take harsh decisions when need be, without worrying about criticism, whether it is from within his party or from the Opposition. He can do this because he believes he is in total control of the situation. Similarly, if you have taken an investment decision after sound research, have the conviction to stand by it and do not get swayed by the noise around you.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi has displayed various traits that have come across as impressive in the first nine weeks that he has been in office. Whether he can deliver in sync with the great expectations India has from him remains to be seen. Meanwhile, small investors can certainly learn these lessons in money management from his activity and personality traits.

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