CYBERBRATS
Windows 2000Young Indian computer programmers are carving a niche for
themselves in the software segment with a flurry of innovative applications and
programmes.
By Binoo K John with Stephen David and
Nandita Chowdhury
An Ansel Adams landscape with its stark black and white contours hangs
in the corridor. Beyond, there are 10 cubicles where programme writers are hunched over
their keyboards. Only the click of the mouse disturbs the silence of the Connaught Place
office of 29-year-old Hemant Sharma's Trisoft Design. Here in Delhi, some of the most
competitive applications for Internet services, with as mighty a sweep as an Adams
landscape, are being created.
Creating new computer applications is nothing new for Sharma.
In the two years he spent at Microsoft in Redmond, US, from 1991, he was part of the team
that helped design the Visual Basic applications that are used in the help functions of
Windows 95. "I always liked creating. Starting my own company I thought was the best
way to go about it," says Sharma, who was Microsoft's youngest technical director in
India before he launched Trisoft Design a year ago. He is on the verge of launching a
programme called Sight -- a unique marketing system for website designers.
Sharma is one of the many
hundreds of highly proficient, number-crunching, fingers-on-the-mouse Indian
cyber-engineers interacting with the rest of their far-flung universe and stretching the
dimensions of cyberworld with attractive user-friendly applications. NASSCOM, the
industry's apex body, estimates that there are more than 200 companies in India -- some
running out of garages -- which are working on a spectrum of innovation activities that
can be used in low technology maintenance work to high technology interfaces for various
applications ranging from telecom to multimedia. "My company is planning to put
Indian talent in global company," says Ashok Tyagi, president of Delhi-based Network
Programs, which was set up two years ago.
The high demand for Indian software engineers abroad and the
mushrooming of software companies in India -- projected turnover of Rs 10,600 crore in
1997-98 (up from Rs 6,300 crore) -- are clear indications that they are already supping
with global giants. The latest indication of Indian software prowess came when Bill Gates
bought Hotmail, an e-mail service started by US-based Indian engineer Sabeer Bhatia.
"Be it high-end consulting and services like project management or specialised
programming like communications, Indian companies and individual engineers are slowly
making a mark," says Tilak Sarkar, CEO of Aworld, a firm which runs online services.
Tyagi's Network Programs, for instance, employs about 200 programmers. His company, which
is the affiliate of a US firm, not only writes programmes for global companies but is
developing operating support systems and business support systems for telecommunications
giants. Also being conceptualised by Network is a directory enquiry system by which a
phone number anywhere in the world can be accessed through a personal computer.
Indian software majors such as Tata Consultancy Services
(TCS) and to a certain extent C-Dot have obviously helped in building a pool of expertise
in the country. While TCS' competency is well-known, the successful programme operations
by a number of smaller technopark-based companies are becoming pivotal to the industry in
India.
Interactive programmes are proving to be a major strength of
Indian companies. At least two companies are launching home-video applications.
Bangalore-based Gray Cell is developing a programme for the integration of different types
of media-voice and e-mail with paging devices. Though a similar programme exists, Gray
Cell hopes to add other crucial components to the applications. "Our goal is to
achieve a seamless integration of information and communications systems and e-page is a
step in that direction," says T.S. Rajesh, the 27-year-old CEO of Gray Cell.
Recently, Gray Cell joined hands with Motorola and Arya Communications to launch Hotline
Paging. The application allows e-page users to send and receive messages from the Internet
and e-mail directly to pagers from any part of the world within minutes.
With salaries in the sector burgeoning, many Indian software
engineers who have jobs in the US are returning to India to set up their own companies or
to work for the biggies. Rajiv Gupta, who graduated from bits, Pilani, and did his masters
from Syracuse University in the US, finds more satisfaction working for a company like
Network, where he is head of a team that conceptualises telecom support systems. He can't
be blamed if he does not find time to play enough cricket with the office team for he has
to manage multi-site projects in which engineers in many sites around the world develop
programmes by interacting with each other. Trisoft's Sharma too has no regrets at having
left Microsoft to return to India.
The potential in computers and the arrival of the Internet
have resulted in a change of mindset which is quite crucial: compete with global
companies, and perhaps beat them at their own game. Whether it is programmes for
video-on-demand applications which digitalise the video or development of other
high-technology interfaces, Indian software majors like Infosys, Wipro Global, LG group
and other lesser companies have their hands full.
With the world at their fingertips, it isn't surprising that
life is a huge never-ending whirl for these young entrepreneurs. Work is never-ending and
mathematical equations pop up in their dreams.
"There is no nine-to-five or five-to- nine here. After I
get home from work and have dinner I'll still be thinking about work. I work even in my
sleep," says 30-year-old Neville Bulsara, CEO of the Mumbai-based N&N Systems and
Software. Bulsara, who started developing anti-virus software in 1988, now has 50
engineers working for him. His company has developed security kits like the popular
Bulsara's Red Alert and Word Alert specifically for macro viruses and programmes such as
Dr Solomon's Mail Guard, which guards e-mail systems. N&N Systems also offers
comprehensive anti-virus protection on dos, Windows 95 and Windows NT.
Identifying and killing viruses are as creative as
architecturing a new programme. It is tough too but has universal applications and
marketing possibilities. "Viruses do not have passports, nor do they require visas to
travel as fast as they do," says Bulsara. In other words, they have obliterated
boundaries. Like the young Indian technobrats. |