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Tuesday, November 19, 2013

Indian entrepreneurs can build next Google: Eric Schmidt

India's entrepreneurial innovators have the potential to build the 'next Google' if the country 'plays its cards right' and ensures Internet access for millions of its citizens, Google's executive chairman Eric Schmidt has said.

In an essay written for the book 'Reimagining India: Unlocking

The Potential of Asia's Next Superpower' edited by global consulting firm McKinsey, Schmidt dubbed India 'an Internet laggard' saying he feels Internet in the country today is like where it was in America in about 1994 - four years before Google was even born.
He said India must increase its Internet penetration across towns and cities, a move that will have a positive impact on its economy and society.
The former Google CEO said he witnessed the creative potential of India's people all around him in Silicon Valley where India-born entrepreneurs account for?40 % of start-ups.
'Just think what will happen when India's entrepreneurial innovators are able to create great global companies without leaving their country. They will change?the world. Hundreds of large firms focused on the Internet will be founded and will succeed by focusing purely on Indian consumers, Indian taste, Indian style,?Indian sports.
'Can anyone of those companies ultimately become the next Google? Of course.'
'That may not happen for quite a few years. But if India plays its cards right, we will soon see Indian engineers and small businesses tackling Indian problems first, then exporting the solutions that work best,' Schmidt said.
With a total population of 1.2 billion, India has over 600 million mobile-phone users but only about 150 million people regularly connect to the Internet.
In 2011, India's Internet penetration rate was 11%, 'far below' that of developed nations where penetration rates average 70%.
India's Internet penetration rate is less than a third of China's penetration ratio of 38 % and less than half of those in developing countries, which average 24%.
'By any reasonable definition, India is an Internet laggard... In spite of its well deserved reputation as one of the world's leading IT and software development hubs, India is far from being the connected society many foreigners imagine,' Schmidt said.
The number of India's broadband users, 20 million, is even smaller, Schmidt said however adding that India is on the cusp of a connectivity revolution.
'I believe India has the chance to leapfrog its current connectivity challenges, bring Internet access to a majority of its citizens - and even raise its penetration ratio to 60 or 70 % within the next 5-10 years,' he said.

HCL shutting down PC manufacturing business

Declining PC sales in the global market has finally started to take a toll on the PC makers, who have already been exploring new avenues with tablets and ultrabooks. PC maker HCL Infosystems has announced it is phasing out its PC manufacturing business – a move that is aimed to help the company better margins and focus on the services and distribution.

"We will be stopping manufacturing. My distribution today does lot of distribution of PCs of multiple brands... We will be in PC distribution and in after-sales services but will not manufacture HCL branded products some time in the future," HCL Infosystems CEO and managing director Harsh Chitale is quoted as saying.

Without disclosing the timeline for the phase out, Chitale said the plan is underway but "manufacturing is not something that is keeping me awake, it's not part of HCL story now".

On possibilities of job cuts, Chitale points out less than 3% of employees of HCL's 15,000-strong full-time employees are part of the manufacturing vertical.

"Of this less than three per cent are in manufacturing, while some will immediately find opening in repair services, the remaining people who could lose their jobs would be less than the natural monthly attrition rate," he said.

According to a TOI report, the PC business contributes about 8%, which is around Rs. 1,000 crore, to the company's overall revenues. With growing popularity of smartphones, tablets and phablets, HCL's PC business had been under an immense pressure. The Rupee's value against the Dollar and other currencies has also hit the Indian PC market, considering the fact that about 90-95% of the components are imported.

Research firm IDC's report for Q1 2013 showed a record dip in PC shipments worldwide. PC makers shipped 76.3 million units in the first three months of 2013, which is a 13.9% decline over the same period in 2012.