Category Archives: Science & Technology

CITD becomes the first MSME institute to go solar

INNOVATIVE:Officials demonstrating Intelligent Dustbin, that gauges the amount of waste that falls in it, a patented product of Central Institute of Tool Design.-Photo: K.V.S. GIRI
INNOVATIVE:Officials demonstrating Intelligent Dustbin, that gauges the amount of waste that falls in it, a patented product of Central Institute of Tool Design.-Photo: K.V.S. GIRI

It will expand the solar power generation to 400 KWP in the days to come

Ministry of Micro Small and Medium Enterprises (MSME) goes solar with Hyderabad-based Central Institute of Tool Design (CITD) installing a 50 KWP roof-top solar energy power plant that generates close to 250 units per day. The plant is the first to be installed in all of the 300 institutes and centres that come under the MSME.

Installation of the power plant has resulted in the institute saving Rs. 2.91 lakh every six months. The CITD is expected to expand its solar power generation to 400 KWP in the coming years. Solar power, once the plant reaches its full capacity will cover about 10 to 12 per cent of energy requirements of the institute.

The next MSME institute in the city to go for solar power is expected to be National Institute of Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises (NIMSME), said Additional Secretary and Development Commissioner Ministry of MSME Surendranath Tripathi said at the inauguration of the plant here on Sunday.

However, other MSME institutes in Arga and Bhubaneswar are expected to install solar power plants before the NIMSME. “All of the 300 institutes in the MSME will go for solar power based on the requirement. The government has already assessed the requirement,” Mr. Tripathi told The Hindu .

Inaugurating the solar plant, Mr. Tripathi said, “The Ministry wants its institutes to be self-sufficient energy wise. The CITD has been working towards installing solar power plant much before other MSME institutes and hence it is the first in the country to get a solar power grid”. Established in 1968 the CITD is the first tool room in India. The campus offers courses to 11,000 to 12,000 students per year out of whom 300 are residential scholars.

The inaugural event also witnessed the launch of video conferencing facility for sharing live classes with sub-centres at Vijayawada, Vizag and Chennai.

CITD Principal Director Sujayat Khan informed that the institute provides four diploma courses, three Masters in Engineering courses in association with Osmania University and one M. Tech course in association with Jawaharlal Nehru Technological University. “The institute also provides vocational training and job oriented software skills for Graduate Engineers and Post Graduate Engineers.

The Placement Cell facilitates campus placement for students enrolled in the Institute,” said administrator Lt. Col. N. Ravi Chowdhary. The CITD also assists close to 2,000 small and medium industries in and around Hyderabad.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Hyderabad / by Special Correspondent / Hyderabad – July 25th, 2016

JITS prof. wins accolades at World Congress on Engineering

Jyothismathi Institute of Technology and Sciences (JITS) associate professor Vankudhotu Malsoru won accolades for his paper presentation at the 24th World Congress on Engineering-2016 organised by the International Association of Engineers in London, from June 29 to July 1.

30 countries

Mr. Malsoru presented a paper on ‘domain specific performance evaluation sequential pattern mining approaches’, and won appreciation from the gathering from over 30 countries.

JITS chairman J. Sagar Rao, principal A.R. Naseer and other faculty members accorded a warm welcome to the associate professor for bringing laurels to the college and the State on Wednesday.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> National> Telangana / by Special Correspondent / Karimnagar – July 14th, 2016

Music to tame a disturbed mind

Dr Kalpana G Sringar (Photo| Vinay Madapu)
Dr Kalpana G Sringar (Photo| Vinay Madapu)

Music hath charm to soothe a savage beast,” a misquoted version of a phrase coined by English playwright William Congreve seems to have clicked with Hyderabad-based mental health professional Dr Kalpana G Sringar and her patients.

“These are my patients who have finished their rehabilitation programme for the day,” she says pointing at the four middle-aged women with notepads, seated in her office. Her patients include those battling depression, phobia, post traumatic stress disorder, schizophrenia and autism.

Sringar pulls out a box of quilled earrings and photo-frames to explain the kind of therapy sessions that happen with the help of stationery items. Her box also contain colourful paintings of fish and parrots among others. “During the rehabilitation sessions, we use these paintings as props. Over the years, I have found that writing, sketching and painting work better than making them read newspaper or engaging them in storytelling. Depending on their skills and qualifications, rehabilitation is customised for each patient. But music therapy is for all,” she says.

While for most of us, music is a must during pumping iron, to kill time while driving from home to office, or to nurse a broken heart, for Sringar and her patients, the weekly 90-minute-long music therapy has been a way to overcome their illnesses for the past four years.

DrKalpana02TELAN11jul2016

But the therapist ensures that instead of just sitting and listening, she engages her patients with drawing mandalas. “Music brings emotions to the surface; you know when those suffering with schizophrenia draw these mandalas, they are all incomplete and disjointed, indicating that their thoughts and feeling are in disarray,” she says.

A learner of carnatic music, Sringar had trained under ghazal master Vithal Rao. Post his demise, she is now a disciple of Ustad Yakoob Ali and Talat Aziz—with whom she sometimes creates music for her therapy sessions. She devotes two hours regularly to her riyaz.

The healer who swears by ghazals and acoustic music, says the idea to incorporate music in her sessions hit her after she read several studies pertaining to it.

“After reading the impacts, I became conscious and I realised it actually helped. If it helped me, wouldn’t it help my patients too? I decided to give it a try,” she recalls.

After four years of trial and error, finding the right music for the right set of patients, today Sringar is one of the few specialised music therapists in Hyderabad.

While reiterating that music is universal and that the universe is based on rhythm with which everyone finds a connection, the doctor adds, “It (music therapy) is not a bandage therapy. It goes hand-in-hand with medication and rehabilitation.”

But the lack of scientific backing for music therapy makes a lot of people shy of it. She says, “It still has a long way to go, but for now I have seen music heal people.”

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> LifeStyle> Health / by Sadaf Aman / July 09th, 2016

Jade Global opens new facility in Hyderabad, eyes $100 mn revenue by 2021

Hyderabad ;

Jade Global Software, which opened a new facility here on Friday, has set a target of $100 million revenue by March 2021.

The US-based advisory, integration, testing, cloud & consulting services, business solutions and IT outsourcing company has chalked out aggressive growth plans. Its current revenue stands at $30 million.

Telangana’s IT Minister K.T. Rama Rao inaugurated Jade Software’s mid-enterprise IT services facility.

“We welcome Jade Global Software to our state. What delights us is announcements continue to flow as firms find value in doing business in Telangana state which is investor and business friendly,” he said.

Jade Global has been ranked in the Inc.5000 list as the fastest growing private companies in the US for five consecutive years.

Karan Yaramada, CEO, Jade Global Soft, said this new 11,000 square foot facility will help the company ramp up its focus in the areas of Analytics & Information Management (AIM), Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP), Managed Services (MS) and Technology & Engineering Services (TES).

“We are starting our Hyderabad centre with a capacity of 100 employees now. In the next five years our goal is to increase this number to five fold,” Karan said.

“We’re essentially investing heavily towards enhancing our existing offerings and adding new facilities that will help ramp up our IT Services to our growing list of mid-size enterprises worldwide,” he added.

He believes that with more than 1,300 IT and ITES firms, Hyderabad has the right combination of infrastructure and human resources to aid to the growth of the company.

“Though services, solutions, and product development are the primary focus for Jade Global, innovation has been our driving force. We find Hyderabad a perfect place to encourage entrepreneur mindset and foster innovation,” he said.
Currently, the company generates about 40 per cent of total revenue from its India operations and plans to increase the same to 60 per cent in the next two years.

“Recently Jade Global established its footprint in Europe with a new office in Britain. We are adding people every day across three continents to augment our growth and expand our 600-member global IT Innovation team,” Karan added.

Jade recently closed a deal with large German based automobile company in India to automate their business processes.
–IANS
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source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News Home> City> Hyderabad / IANS / July 08th, 2016

Discovery of new bacterium brings laurels to Palamuru University

In what seems to be a prelude to the second phase of Haritha Haaram, an associate professor in Palamuru University’s Department of Microbiology has earned the rare distinction of discovering a new strain of bacteria helpful in plant growth and agro-forestry.

The bacterium, Chryseomicrobium Palamuruense, will be the first ever to be named after Palamuru (Mahabubnagar), and its discovery has led Palamuru University to create a new page in the science arena, says Professor Pavan Kumar Pindi, who isolated the bacterium from a soil sample taken from inside the university campus. The sample was collected from a drain in 2009, and its culture began a year later running into over five years of research before the bacterium was isolated.

The results of the research have been published in the International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology (IJSEM), an international peer reviewed journal of American Society of Microbiology. The publication can be viewed online after it undergoes scientific evaluation from American scientific and production evaluation.

“The bacterium aids the growth and survival rate of nursery plants and agro-forestry tree species. It has high potential as bio-fertiliser and also as enzyme producer for industrial applications,” says Prof. Pavan Kumar, adding that it aids in increasing the plant growth hormones in many agricultural crops. While there are many bacteria which aid plant growth through Nitrogen fixation, each is specific to certain host plant and the latest discovery is specific to nursery plants, Prof. Pavan Kumar says. Application of this strain as bio-fertiliser prepares the plant to withstand biotic and abiotic stress in any climatic and soil conditions.

“The same was confirmed by experiments done in collaboration with IIT-Delhi, the results of which are published in the Indian Journal of Biotechnology,” he said, and added that the novelty of this bacterium has also been recognised by the National Centre for Biotechnology Information.

The Palamuruense strain culture has been deposited in culture deposition centres of Japan, Korea, Netherlands, and Sweden for preservation for future and further research. A patent will soon be applied for, said Prof. Kumar, who also had been a postdoctoral fellow of DAAD for three years and of CCMB for five years.

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All about the bacterium

The bacterium, Chryseomicrobium Palamuruense, to be the first ever to be named after Palamuru

Professor Pavan Kumar Pindi isolated the bacterium from a soil sample taken from inside the university campus

It aids the growth and survival rate of nursery plants and agro-forestry tree species

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source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Hyderabad / by Swathi Vadlamudi / Hyderabad – July 04th, 2016

Students develop Internet of Things products

Worried about hair fall? A comb envisioned by a team of undergraduate engineering students can now tell if you should worry about receding hairline.

The comb and other innovative ideas like a plant capable of sharing emotions based on moisture content are some ideas that have come out of the second edition of EXCITE, brainchild of Telangana Academy for Skill and Knowledge (TASK), Hyderabad Software Enterprise Association (HYSEA) and JNTU.

The EXCITE, five-week workshop internship programme, saw 270 students from 30 colleges participate in the programme starting May 27. The workshop resulted in nearly 90 Android-based and Internet of Things products conceived by the students. Teams with the ideas will receive mentorship over the next 12 months while the top 10 teams will also receive seed funding to bring their products to the market. Organizers of the programme said that besides helping youngsters turn entrepreneurs and develop their products, it also aids in getting them jobs with handsome pay packages.

They claimed that the EXCITE participants last year had bagged as much as Rs. 9 lakh, offered by product developers. A few other product ideas from this year’s workshop include I-toy that helps parents monitor their children from anywhere and patrolling drones. The initiative has also spawned similar initiatives in colleges.

Dubbed ‘Maker Space’, this initiative is now being pilot-tested in 12 institutions, where year-long training through hackathons is provided. This year’s EXCITE programme has led the organizers to expand Maker Space to 40 colleges in the city.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Hyderabad / by Staff Reporter / Hyderabad – July 04th, 2016

AIG doctor GV Rao receives BC Roy award

Hyderabad :

Dr GV Rao, director, chief of surgical gastroenterology, minimally invasive surgery and transplantation services at the Asian Institute of Gastroenterology, received the prestigious Dr BC Roy National Award from President Pranab Mukherjee in New Delhi on Friday, on the occasion of National Doctors Day.

Dr Rao is one of the few surgeons in the world with enormous experience in minimally invasive endoscopy and laparoscopy surgeries. He pioneered several innovative hybrid techniques including laparoscopic assisted pan enteroscopy, intra operative cryoscopy. He is one of the pioneers in the emerging technology of Natural Orifice Trans Luminal Endoscopic Surgery (NOTES) also known as ‘No Scar Surgery’.

Dr Rao is the board member of Asia Pacific Endoscopy Task Force, Asia Pacific Endo Laparoscopic Surgeons and is in the executive committees of Indian Association of Surgical Gastroenterology, Society of Gastrointestinal Endoscopy of India, Association of Minimally Invasive Surgeons of India. He is also the President Elect for the International Hepato Pancreato Biliary Association.

He is credited and acknowledged for the First Trans Oral Endoscopic Appendectomy in the world. This is considered the next big revolution in minimally invasive surgery which would decrease the morbidity of surgery.

He had earlier received government of India’s Parliament Gold Medal for his work in gastroenterology. He was awarded the honorary fellowship of the Venezuelan Surgical Society, Egyptian Laparoscopic Surgical Society among other laurels.

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> Cities> Hyderabad / by Express News Service / July 02nd, 2016

Now, no injury is incurable!

A ray of hope:Sports medicine practitioner Venkatesh Movva says stem cells treatment is suitable for various orthopaedic conditions.— PHOTO: V.V. SUBRAHMANYAM
A ray of hope:Sports medicine practitioner Venkatesh Movva says stem cells treatment is suitable for various orthopaedic conditions.— PHOTO: V.V. SUBRAHMANYAM

A first-of-its-kind medical centre promises treatment for career-upsetting injuries through stem cells

Athletes suffering career-upsetting injuries now have a new ray of hope in a first-of-its-kind medical centre that promises treatment through stem cells.

Venkatesh Movva, who heads the institution, insists that stem cells treatment was revolutionary and suitable for various orthopaedic conditions. The US-based sports medicine practitioner explains that the process involves extracting stem cells from the bone marrow from the back of the hip, a big reservoir of stem cells. “Then, we will harvest and isolate cells which are processed in the lab and re-inject those cells back into the cartilage, ligament, tendon, joint or wherever needed,” he pointed out.

The doctor, who also promotes American Football in India, explains efficacy of stem cell treatment through knee osteoarthritis. “Total knee replacement was the only option. With stem cells, we can now heal and regenerate the lost tissue like cartilage, meniscus and ligaments to reverse the arthritis and circumvent surgery,” he observed.

On what such treatment could cost, Dr. Venkatesh said for two joints, it costs as much as $ 7,000 in the US, but costs could be significantly low in India. “There are no legal issues involved in the treatment as we are using the patient’s own stem cells that are neither stored nor preserved,” he said, adding that treatment does not require hospitalisation.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Hyderabad / by V.V. Subrahmanyam / Hyderabad – June 24th, 2016

CLP India, Suzlon tie up for solar project in Telangana

Big deal:Suzlon won solar projects of 210 MW, including the 100 MW project, in Telangana.– File photo
Big deal:Suzlon won solar projects of 210 MW, including the 100 MW project, in Telangana.– File photo

CLP India and Suzlon Group have formed a joint venture to set up a 100-MW solar project in Veltoor in Telangana State.

Under the agreement, CLP India acquired 49 per cent stake in SE Solar, a special purpose vehicle set up by Suzlon, for Rs.73.5 crore.

CLP India, a wholly-owned subsidiary of CLP Holdings Ltd., listed on Hong Kong Stock Exchange, has the option to acquire the balance 51 per cent, according to a statement on Monday.

The Veltoor project is expected to be commissioned by May 2017 and will be funded 80 per cent by debt and 20 per cent equity.

“We remain keen (to invest in solar) and continue to explore such projects to expand our renewable energy footprint in Telangana and across India,” said Rajiv Mishra, Managing Director, CLP India.

The company is keen to invest in solar in India to complement its wind portfolio. The Veltoor Project is its first joint venture. Suzlon Group CEO J.P.Chalasani said CLP and Suzlon had successfully collaborated in the past for wind projects and “we will continue to partner for powering a greener tomorrow.” Suzlon won solar projects of 210 MW, including the 100 MW project, in Telangana through competitive bidding process.

The power purchase agreements (PPAs) were signed in February.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Hyderabad / by N. Ravi Kumar / Hyderabad – June 21st, 2016

T-Hub outpost in US

Hyderabad :

IT minister KT Rama Rao has said that an outpost of the T-Hub will be set up in Silicon Valley in the United States.

Addressing a convention of investors and IT professionals at Silicon Valley on Wednesday, Rama Rao dwelt at length on Telangana government’s plans on investments, industries and innovation. The meeting was attended by prominent industrialists from Silicon Valley.

Rama Rao said the Telangana government too started T-Hub to encourage new thoughts and innovations. The largest incubator T-Hub outpost centre would be opened in Silicon Valley, the minister said.

He said that efforts were on to make start-ups as scale-ups. ‘’We need support and cooperation from TiE (a global network of entrepreneurs) and investors from Silicon Valley,” the minister said.

“We are interested to partner with Silicon Valley and TiE to attract more investments to Telangana,” Rama Rao said.

The minister said the state government took up digital literacy in a massive scale and is moving towards m-Governance from e-Governance aiming to take the administration to the masses.

Rama Rao is currently touring the North American country along with some senior officials.

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> States> Telangana / by Express News Service / June 02nd, 2016