Frost and Sullivan, which had been conferring best practices awards in areas such as enterprise telephony, network security, database and enterprise application software, has for the first time recognized excellence in the area storage solutions in India, IBM said in a statement. The company provides innovative technology, open standards, excellent performance and a broad portfolio of storage proven software, hardware and solutions offerings.
Hyderabad is fast emerging as destination for pharma and bio-tech industries with projected growth of 30 to 40 per cent, consultant company Frost and Sullivan has said.
The business intelligence applications in India is poised to grow to $70 million by 2007, registering a compounded annual growth of 29.4 per cent, a report by Frost and Sullivan, a global growth consulting company said.
Bharti Airtel was awarded for its performance in the South Asian region, the company said. The selection of the company was based on the parameters of growth in mobile subscriber base, EBIDTA margins, market share and Average Revenue per User.
Vacancies in countries like India will be filled not only by returning Indians, but also by Americans and Europeans.
India is the second largest mobile handset market in the world after China.
There is an increasing demand for development of tighter security measures due to huge development of small to medium airports and increase in baseline international airports. The Indian Homeland Security market is expected to expand to counter future attacks from terrorist outfits or Naxal groups.
Research and consultancy firms talk about next year's top IT trends in India.
Driven by factors such as huge appeal for banking and retail applications and large-scale penetration of Internet and e-commerce, India's smart card market is set to touch $21.7 million by 2005.
The online pharmacy market, which was worth about $512 million in 2018, is growing at a CAGR of 63 per cent and is expected to hit overall revenues of over $3.6 billion by 2022.
Tata was concerned that most innovations were happening outside India, some by Indians.
Start-ups, especially the e-commerce players, are either staying away from these campuses or recruiting in much smaller numbers than last year