From the city of ‘Subah Subah Gyarah Baje’ to IT-Hub of India
By News Desk| Updated: 12th January 2021 5:28 pm IST The first Computer in the world , ENIAC and Apple s latest smartphone iPhone 11
Amir Ullah Khan
Before the era of optical fibre cables and high-speed Digital Subscriber Lines (DSL) or even freely available landlines, the IT industry in Hyderabad technically started with a satellite and line-of-sight high-speed microwave link. It started with J A Chowdary (JAC), whose vision helped create a miracle in our city. In a sleepy town where scheduled meetings usually happened at ‘Subah-Subah-Gyarah-Baje’ (Early in the morning at eleven am), an Indian technocrat mustered up the audacity to change shape-up the fortunes of a four-hundred-year-old city which went sleepy post-Indian Independence.
The Local Government Association (LGA) has announced funding for seven councils to help them to improve local and regional connectivity.
It said that those selected are: Westminster City Council; Essex County Council; Durham County Council; South Hams District Council; Warwickshire County Council; Northamptonshire County Council; and the Royal Borough of Greenwich.
It has not yet gone public with the details of the projects for each council, but said they focus on developing sustainable rural connectivity mapping, toolkits for tackling urban not-spots and initiatives for targeted take up of local connectivity offers.
The LGA indicated in October that each would receive £20,000 under its Digital Connectivity Programme.
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Consumer product packaging has long been scrutinized for structural and aesthetic performance. Now, though, a more important characteristic is at the fore – intelligence.
Packaging can be smarter and ‘digitally connected’ when combined with distributed computer systems and the web. This change will revolutionize productivity and quality while delivering new capability in a variety of product packaging applications. This capability has led to the fourth Industrial Revolution for manufacturing, or Industry 4.0, where data is dominant, and the Internet of Things (IoT) provides greater connectivity than ever before.
Packaging took a technological leap forward in the mid-1970s when it began carrying a printed UPC barcode that provided automatic price scanning at retail checkout – a foundational moment when new symbols on packaging, combined with sensor technology and computing power, provided a digital link to point-of-sale systems. In the 1980s, manufacturers discovered the pow