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Strategies & Market Trends : India Coffee House -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Mohan Marette who wrote (4619)6/15/1999 11:50:00 PM
From: Swami  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 12475
 
It is about time the West & Clinton spoke out against the injustices in the area

Best Regards
the swami



To: Mohan Marette who wrote (4619)6/16/1999 10:45:00 AM
From: Mohan Marette  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 12475
 
Big Blue to step up Indian investments

Kalyan Parbat
CALCUTTA 15 JUNE

US-BASED computer giant IBM Corporation is stepping up investments in India. Over the next five years, Big Blue will route a substantial portion of its $300-million (around Rs 1,300 crore) corpus earmarked for its global software developer marketing (SDM) program to India.

SDM is a separate division of IBM World Trade Corporation that lends financial support to independent solution vendors (ISVs) using IBM technologies worldwide.

The decision to increase financial exposure is seen as a reflection of IBM's commitment to offer value-added opportunities to the ISV community in India.

“Though specific investment numbers are being worked out at IBM headquarters, India is being viewed as a key destination for future capital infusions, given the wealth of premium IT resources available in the country,” Mr Vish Padmanabhan, vice-president (software & solution developer marketing) at Tata-IBM, told The Economic Times.
For starters, IBM will bear 50 per cent of the total marketing cost-burden of ISVs, which could be as high as 18 per cent of its aggregate projected sales revenue in a 12-month calendar year, he said.


Notably, SDM forms the core of IBM's thrust in providing end-to-end solutions to clients worldwide. And more importantly, for keeping close contact with independent commercial application developers deploying IBM technology.

An integral part of IBM's global SDM operations is the 'solution developer program' (SDP), which has been designed to help ISVs across the globe generate leading-edge software solutions around IBM technology.

Notably, commercial application developers can participate in SDP scheme free of cost. Members enrolling for SDP will be given individual proprietary identification numbers, direct tie-ups with IBM's formidable global marketing network, technical support and testing and validation facilities on IBM technology solutions.

They will also enjoy ready access to IBM's 'Software Mall', an online ordering system that allows commercial SDP members to procure new IBM software products at throwaway prices.

For instance, commercial members under the SDP can order the first copy of any IBM software product at cost-plus shipping. Thereafter, they will enjoy 50 per cent discount on additional copies. However, such software may only be used for evaluation, development, testing or demonstration.

Importantly, ISVs in India opting for SDP can also use the facilities at IBM's state-of-the-art 'solution partnership centre' (SPC) in Bangalore. The SPCs were created as tangible IBM resource centres to buttress Big Blue's international solution developer program. At present, there are 10 such IBM centres worldwide, of which four are in the Asia-Pacific in Sydney, Tokyo, Shanghai and Bangalore.

(Source:Economic Times)



To: Mohan Marette who wrote (4619)6/17/1999 9:17:00 PM
From: Mohan Marette  Respond to of 12475
 
Wangchuk's War.

A soft-spoken Buddhist soldier gives India one of its major footholds in the icy mountains.

...'By all accounts, Wangchuk is an extraordinary soldier, a contradiction even. "We could never imagine he could even hurt a fly," recalls Pintoo Norbu, hotel owner in Leh who knows him. The son of a paramilitary soldier, Wangchuk is a deeply religious Buddhist -- before going to battle he and some of his men went to the Dalai Lama, who was visiting Leh, to seek his blessings -- soft spoken and scrupulously polite. But that gentleman's exterior hides the tough interior of an officer the army is proud to showcase... '
india-today.com