nasscom engineering summit 2014: keynote i: engineered from india: technology transformation ,...
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Gopichand Katragadda, Group Chief Technology Officer, Tata SonsTRANSCRIPT
Engineering a Century of Indian Innovation
Gopichand Katragadda
makhi bhakhi phakhi dhakhi nakhi ñakhi ńakhi hasjha skaki kisga śghaki kighva |
ghlaki kigra hakya dhaki kicasga śjha ńva kla pta pha cha kala-ardha-jyāh ║
Makhi = 25*100+2*102 = 2253437*Sin(225minutes) = 225
India: materials advantage
Carbon Steel
Nano-silver Cast Steel Pictures Source:
Damscus Sword: http://powerhousemuseum.comn
Nano Silver: http://tajonline.tolshop.com; Congreves Rockets: www.answers.com
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Engineered in India
Do you mean to say that Tatas propose to make steel rails to British specifications? Why, I will undertake to eat every pound of steel rail they succeed in making…
1914: In the First World War Tata Steel supplied 1500 miles of rail and 300,000 tonnes of steel material for military campaigns in Mesopotamia, Egypt, Salonica and East Africa
1907: attributed to Sir Frederick Upcott, the chief commissioner for Indian railways
Designed and Engineered in India
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4mm overall thickness 1.1mm movement
thickness Material innovation for dial
hand (duraluminum) to reduce weight and manage torque
Manufacturing innovations to make sapphire glass with near-zero tolerance
Design innovations on case to reduce back-cover thickness from 0.8mm steel to 0.45mm glass
The Worlds Thinnest Watch
Engineers have shaped our world
Industrial Age
Electric Age
Digital Age
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Creating Value
Smashing the hand-mind-market barrier
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Engineering Excellence
Engineering Foundation
•Theoretical fundamentals•Hands-on expertise•Domain depth•Simulation expertise•Continuous learning
Engineering Mind-set
•Attention to detail•System level thinking•Market and customer orientation•Innovation and change orientation•Engineering judgement
Execution
•Project planning and estimation•Quality and design margins•Cost and productivity consciousness•Documentation and design practices•Sense of urgency and a desire to win
Where is the next age…
• Genomics • Artificial Intelligence• Connectomics• Chaos Theory• Cloud Computing
• Rare Earths• Composites• Nano Materials• Meta Materials• Superconductors
• Near Zero Carbon
Energy• Wireless Power• Quality of Life• DNA Life Charts• Augmented Reality
• Affordable Renewable Energy
• Early Health• Accessible Water• Predicting Natural
Disasters• Immersive
Entertainment
Emerging Science
Emerging Materials
Emerging Need
Current Need
Energy Sources
Digitization
Manufacturing Techniques
Innovation practices from the best…
1. Know your end customer
2. Know your business and market priorities
3. Find and articulate your passion
4. Develop the voice of the future
5. Set aggressive goals
6. Map goals to actions and focus on actions
7. Work as a team8. Communicate9. Fail early and
iterate to success10.Celebrate small
and big wins
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This is our age…
Unleash the potential of the Indian market and Indian engineering…
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Energy
India alone needs to add 225GW in generation and matching T&D infrastructure – a $450B 10 year opportunity ($45B per year)• Coal beneficiation, coal liquefaction• Bio-mass gasification, bio-fuel• Coatings and repair technology• Solar technology, hydrogen, methanol, fuel
cells
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Food Security and Wellness
Global markets for wellness food is $275 Billion*, for alternate medicine $100 Billion*, and for fertilizers $175 Billion**• Traditional medicine derived wellness foods• Efficient slow-release fertilizers with micro-nutrients• Organic pesticide and new farming techniques• Robust seeds (hybrid, coated seeds)• Accessible water (double usable water from 1000 to
2000 cubic meters person per year) *http://www.statista.com/**http://finance.yahoo.com/
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Defence, Aerospace,
Indian Civil Aviation market $100B and MRO $50B by 2025• Regional maintenance and repair packages –
hot and harsh • Big data fleet/factory analytics • Advanced materials
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Consumer and Retail
500 Million new Indian consumers will be added by 2025• Customer insight through open innovation
platform • Advanced materials and industrial waste reuse
using composites, nanotechnology, and meta materials
• Wearable technologies beyond the smart watch
We grow great by dreams. All big men are dreamers. They see things in the soft haze of a spring day or in the red fire of a long winter's evening. Some of us let these dreams die, but others nourish and protect them; nurse them through bad days till they bring them to the sunshine and light which comes always to those who hope that their dreams will come true (Woodrow Wilson)