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Hyderabad CBN

Chalanachithram.com DB » New TF Industry Related » Archive through November 30, 2017 » Hyderabad CBN « Previous Next »
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Bumper
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Username: Bumper

Post Number: 12363
Registered: 07-2014
Posted From: 199.168.151.106

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Posted on Thursday, November 30, 2017 - 10:27 am:       

HYD metro ki CBN ki sambandham ledhu ani edusthuna batch

VIjawada metro anaganeyy cbn kutra ani enduku antaruu??

y this double standard?? Vijayawada ki kuda organic growth lo metro vachindi ani chepalii ga meruu??
Maa blood veru , maa breed veruuu
 

Sp1234
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Post Number: 7729
Registered: 11-2014
Posted From: 24.19.181.171

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Posted on Thursday, November 30, 2017 - 10:17 am:       


Dhonifan:



Eseva lekapote emanna chastaara...dochipettaru
 

Dhonifan
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Post Number: 14100
Registered: 12-2012
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Posted on Thursday, November 30, 2017 - 03:40 am:       

hindu vadu cbn ki support ga pracharam chesadu buss news vesi :D

eseva kendhralu eppudo maa nizam dora pettindu
 

Yodha
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Username: Yodha

Post Number: 12238
Registered: 08-2011
Posted From: 85.17.24.66

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Posted on Thursday, November 30, 2017 - 03:18 am:       


Doraveerachakra:

CBN hyderabad ni develop sesaadu anedhi myth : idhi kaayas annee nammuthaaii
CBN hyderabad ni kanipettaadu anedhi factuuu: idhi memu bhee accept setthaayy


CBN hyd ni develop chesad ani oppkumem hai.. gajji hai
Bhagat Singh|Subhash chandra bose
 

Doraveerachakra
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Post Number: 5261
Registered: 11-2010
Posted From: 82.3.170.250

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Posted on Thursday, November 30, 2017 - 03:14 am:       

CBN hyderabad ni develop sesaadu anedhi myth : idhi kaayas annee nammuthaaii
CBN hyderabad ni kanipettaadu anedhi factuuu: idhi memu bhee accept setthaayy
 

Yodha
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Username: Yodha

Post Number: 12236
Registered: 08-2011
Posted From: 85.17.24.66

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Posted on Thursday, November 30, 2017 - 03:13 am:       

Hyd ni cbn develop cheyakapothe.. epatiki addaka thinnevallu.. admit chese dhammu ledhu
Bhagat Singh|Subhash chandra bose
 

Yodha
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Username: Yodha

Post Number: 12235
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Posted on Thursday, November 30, 2017 - 03:12 am:       

http://www.thehindubusinessline.com/2001/08/26/stories/14263 9es.htm

E seva by CBN
Bhagat Singh|Subhash chandra bose
 

Yodha
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Username: Yodha

Post Number: 12234
Registered: 08-2011
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Posted on Thursday, November 30, 2017 - 03:11 am:       

https://www.forbes.com/global/1998/0727/0108030a.html#7853a5 8418a0

When Bill Gates was looking for a location for Microsoft's second software development center outside the U.S. (the first was in Israel), he chose Hyderabad, capital of the south Indian state of Andhra Pradesh.

This surprised a lot of people. When they set up shop in India, most computer companies opt for Bangalore, 500 kilometers south of Hyderabad (see map). The Silicon Valley of Bangalore is teeming with talented software engineers. Typical annual salary for a new hire: $4,100. IBM, Intel and Compaq are only a few of the computer companies that have hung out their shingles in Bangalore in recent years.

By comparison, Hyderabad, the former home of the nawabs (Indian princes), is a backwater. Andhra Pradesh is one of India's poorer states; over 70% of its 73 million inhabitants live in countryside villages. Hyderabad (pop. 3 million) doesn't have an international airport.

So why did Gates choose Hyderabad? Because successful Bangalore is now bursting at the seams. Cars clog the roads. Power regularly fails.

Real estate prices are high. Companies often pay stock options to keep valued employees, but even then retaining workers is a problem.

Hyderabad, on the other hand, is just beginning to take off. Few traffic jams or overbooked restaurants here. $75,000 buys you a house in a good neighborhood that would cost almost $100,000 in Bangalore. Newly minted software engineers typically work for $3,500 a year, 15% below Bangalore scale, and there are plenty of them: About one in four Indian software engineers is a native of Andhra Pradesh, according to a survey by Nasscom, a software industry association.

Hyderabad has something else going for it: Nara Chandrababu Naidu, Andhra Pradesh's ambitious chief minister. Naidu, 48, would like nothing better than to upstage Bangalore. Recognizing that Microsoft would attract more technology companies to Hyderabad, Naidu lobbied Gates hard when the multibillionaire visited India last year. He promised that Microsoft would receive favorable tax treatment (he essentially said that he would match the tax incentives that other states offer), continuous power supply and 8 hectares of land reserved for their center.

So far Naidu has been keeping his promises. "The local government has been very helpful," says S. Somasegar, an Indian-born general manager at Microsoft who's in charge of setting up the center. "They're also investing to improve the infrastructure." The World Bank has agreed to lend Naidu's government more than $1.5 billion for, among other things, building new roads and water supply projects.

Rushing to build up to the critical mass that Hyderabad needs to compete against Bangalore, Naidu's government has leased out buildings to house a new Indian Institute of Information Technology, where IBM has started a training school. Oracle will be investing over $10 million in a software development center in Hyderabad that will employ 250 people and is to open in late July. And Hitec City, a commercial complex built by a public/private partnership, will be opening in August. Naidu beams with pride: "Infotech is bound to emerge as a strategic sector which will both generate wealth and create employment opportunities."

Bhagat Singh|Subhash chandra bose
 

Yodha
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Post Number: 12233
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Posted on Thursday, November 30, 2017 - 03:09 am:       

http://www.thehindu.com/2000/03/18/stories/02180007.htm

This was the reason why Hyderabad was chosen, among Mumbai, Bangalore and Chennai, for locating the Indian School of Business and the first batch is to be enrolled in 2001. This school has links with the Wharton and Kellog Schools of Business. The second batch of students are taking the course at the schools of excellence set up by Microsoft and Oracle, among others, with their own faculties, in Indian Institute of Information Technology, at Gachi Bowli. The ICICI's Knowledge Park, developed on a 200-acre campus at Turkapally near here, has commissioned two of its 10 modular laboratories, each on 3,200 sq. ft., with complete facilities such as gas lines, compressed air, fume cupboards and a fibre optic network for high speed data transfer.Last December, the Twin Cities Integrated Network Services was inaugurated, with a pilot project in Banjara Hills, where 18 services of six Government departments are available. The pilot project is operational in Ward 8 of Municipal Corporation of Hyderabad. According to the Secretary, IT, Mr. J. Sathyanarayana, the next stage of ``electronic payment'' would be in place by July. The Government will extend the network to another 15 places in the city and later to all district headquarters.
Bhagat Singh|Subhash chandra bose
 

Yodha
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Post Number: 12232
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Posted on Thursday, November 30, 2017 - 03:07 am:       

https://www.telegraphindia.com/1021115/asp/nation/story_1386 930.asp

The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation is donating vaccine worth $11.5 million, which will be distributed in all 22 districts of the state by primary health centres.

Under the first phase launched in 2000, over three lakh children in six districts were given vaccine free of cost.

Asked why Andhra had been chosen for the programme, the man who perfected Windows said the state had agreed to initiate the pilot project of Hepatitis-B vaccine in the country.

“Under the leadership of your chief minister, the state also took up the initiatives for progress and also creating a disease-free society,” Gates said. Naidu, he added, was not only “receptive” to new initiatives in the realm of information technology but also in health and economic reforms. “You are lucky to have a chief minister like Naidu.”

Bhagat Singh|Subhash chandra bose
 

Yodha
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Posted on Thursday, November 30, 2017 - 03:05 am:       

https://www.cio.com/article/2442285/outsourcing/profile--pow erpoint-prophet-n--chandrababu-naidu-stakes-his-career-on-th e-promise-of-it.html

Obviously, much has changed since 1995. Naidu is surrounded by advisers and secretaries who understand and support his mission. As a result, Andhra Pradesh today is a model of Indian e-government initiatives (see "Takin’ It to the Streets," Page 162), and Hyderabad has become home to dozens of IT businesses, schools and software development centers. Naidu has built a reputation for being business-friendly, promoting new incentives (free land, permits and tax breaks) for IT businesses that settle in Andhra Pradesh. Through healthy doses of policy making and self-promotion, Naidu has come to personify his entire nation’s development as an IT superpower. And he’s not shy about taking credit. "I have brought some psychological change [to India]," Naidu says. "Everybody in India thought, ’We cannot [succeed in IT]. We’re not America; we’re not Singapore.’ We have changed that climate. Now everybody thinks we can do it." Naidu is quick to point out that he was the only politician promoting IT five years ago, and he’s quicker to point out that all Indian politicians are talking tech today. "When I initially began to focus on IT, many people thought I was pursuing an elitist agenda," Naidu says. "Now everyone realizes the importance of IT for India’s future."
Bhagat Singh|Subhash chandra bose

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