
Singha saar looks like you have a house to sell

this will also ensure a recovery in blr housing market
Not sure if the visa issue will be discussed.NEW DELHI: India will take up with the US the issue of non-tariff barriers (NTBs)—or restrictions other than those related to tariffs—being faced by
Indian businesses in exporting to the country at the next bilateral trade meeting. The commerce department is collecting inputs from various sectors on the restrictions they are facing in penetrating the US market, which would be eventually taken up with the US department of trade, a commerce department official said.
“Indian industries in various sectors such as agriculture, textiles, chemicals, pharmaceuticals, seafood and vehicles have been complaining about various barriers being faced by them in the US market. We are trying to compile them so that they can be taken up with the US government in a structured manner,” the official told ET.
Now that the new UPA government is in place and the US has a new trade representative, the next round of bilateral trade meeting between India and the US is expected soon, the official added.
Studies carried out by Indian research agencies show that the most frequently applied NTB on Indian goods are technical barriers to trade (TBT), including safety and food safety measures.
For instance, while the US allowed India to export mangoes after long years of negotiations, the high cost of irradiation (ensuring there are no fruit flies) and inspections by US officials increase the cost of operation, rendering Indian mangoes incompetitive.
“There are other regulations too, like product characteristic requirements, marking requirements and labelling requirements which makes the process of exporting to the US extremely tough,” the official said.
The commerce department hopes to conclude the process of compilation of data on non-tariff barriers by August. “We will be in a position to take up our case with the US in August,” the official said.
The US, too, has initiated an investigation to find out how India’s farm trade barriers affect exports from that country.
The US is India’s largest trading partner with bilateral trade touching $44.8 billion in 2008.
I will be honest and say that I do not know the macro picture nor am I convinced that anyone has a complete grip over this else things would not be falling apart ; doing a post mortem is always easy.shyam wrote:I think Markos and Negi are missing the macro picture, just combine your data points with hiring data you saw.
You forgot the number of people that will have to be replaced as older people retire.markos wrote: ...
I checked DOL website on the outlook for Computer related occupations and following was the projected job growth from 2006-2016
http://www.bls.gov/oco/oco1002.htm#compThis translates to an annual growth rate of 80,000 per year. Considering this estimate was as of 2006, and over 200,000 IT jobs are lost in the last couple of years, the net job growth even at the projected rate could come down to about 60,000 per year, which could be met by the talent from US universities itself, as by Premji's own admission US universities produce around 70,000.Computer Scientists/DBA: 200,000
Programmers: -18,000
Software Engg: 324,000
Support Specialists: 155,000
System Analysts: 146,000
Total: 807,000
FCOE is about to become a standard, and sounds very promising (unlike iSCSI, which used generic LAN switches and IP networks). The FCOE solution that Cisco is presenting is the Nexus switches that are purpose-built for DCs and unlike traditional LAN switches meet the 0% packet loss and predictable latency requirements of data switches. I think Cisco is very strongly placed and the very problems you mention with traditional storage networks will push people into Cisco's arms.pandyan wrote:netzilla's grand strategy is to eat into the market by cutting off fiber channel and replace with ethernet for SAN. that is what this unified computing vision is all about....by doing so, they are reducing cost and reducing the margins for competitors.
having said that, well estabilshed SAN users have already invested heavily on fiber channel for variety of reasons....they wont move over to ethernet. there in lies the challenge for cisco...the segment where margin is highest is not the easiest to crack.
historically, even within fiber channel, companies tend to stick to single vendor because of interop issues.
on pure ethernet based consolidation (non-san), paq paq can very easily canisterize a solution similar to UC
Singha wrote: datacenter-in-a-box anyone ? with a Netapp type filer hosting say 10 TB of HDD over a iScsi link and a ton of VMs (linux, win, android) loaded up inside a man could just get everything done within a single box.
MUMBAI: Even as Australia is making headlines for hostilities towards Indians, Australian banks are set to implement billions of dollars worth of IT
projects and could also outsource many of their functions to India.
Some of its top banks are looking to implement core-banking projects, and the first of these projects from the National Australia Bank has already gone to Oracle Financial Solutions, earlier i-flex Solutions.
These projects could range anywhere from $2-$4 billion, with the software licences alone costing $500 million. Unlike the US, banks in Australia are still very profitable. “Many of these banks are running applications on legacy systems and hardware that may not be supported anymore. They are shifting to core banking applications and awarding contracts
for their implementation,” said Tim Sheedy, senior analyst, Forrester Research. One of Australia’s big four banks, Commonwealth Bank, is also in the midst of a core-banking modernisation programme, while two of the other big four banks are also in similar discussions with vendors. These banks are looking at outsourcing their entire IT to select functions such as monitoring and maintenance, said Mr Sheedy.
The banks are outsourcing out of necessity to cut costs and move from a variable cost model to a more predictable cost model, he said. The findings of a report yet to be released by Forrester, show that the outsourcing is staging a comeback in Australia. “Australia had moved away from outsourcing but now cost is driving them to it again.
Australian banks have never outsourced but are now starting to. The outsourcing contracts that come up could be in hundreds of millions of dollars,” he said.
So, although IT budgets in the Asia Pacific are shrinking by an average of 9%, outsourcing has increased. “The banks are doing it to save money. So we will see a considerable offshoring component because price will be a key consideration,” said Mr Sheedy.
Tanaji wrote:Purely naive question:
For the proponents of cloud computing, why should I trust my data to some entity that I hardly know about and have no knowledge of their security policies?
How many of you keep your financial data on Google servers?
“In most developed economies, the work force is aging,” said Ranjit Tinaikar, a partner with McKinsey, a consulting firm. The health care costs associated with employing those Western workers will continue to increase, he said, creating a “big opportunity” for India.
A decade ago, McKinsey and India’s powerful information technology and outsourcing trade group, Nasscom, predicted that revenue from outsourcing by foreign companies would reach $50 billion in India in 2010. The global economic slowdown has delayed that by three or four quarters — revenue is predicted to reach $47 billion this year.
And in April, Nasscom and McKinsey predicted that by 2020, outsourcing would yield $175 billion in revenue here.
Growth will slow this year at many of India’s biggest outsourcing companies, however, because of the implosion of some of their largest clients: banks, mortgage servicing companies and Wall Street firms. But that does not mean revenue is no longer growing.
“People who have never looked at outsourcing before are saying they have to do it,” said Amitabh Chaudhry, the chief executive of Infosys BPO, the outsourcing arm of one of the largest Indian information technology companies. He expects his unit to grow 25 to 30 percent this year, compared with 40 to 50 percent in the past.
But political pressures are making a difference in how business is done. One growing trend, many outsourcing executives say, is placing more Indian employees in offices in the client’s home country. That way the job, ostensibly, does not move abroad. But over the long term, many are likely to be moved across the globe.
sum wrote:Seems Brocade is going on a major expansion spree in Bengaluru (atleast the HW side)....
How is the co doing and how does its future look?
I see two buildings being constructed in bay area with temp brocade banner on top. I would presume that is an expansion or move from smaller facility or consolidation.Brocade is going on a major expansion
Microsoft boss Steve Ballmer has threatened to move more US jobs overseas if President Barack Obama refuses to change his stance on ending tax breaks on foreign earnings.
Big Steve told Bloomberg yesterday that US tax rates made jobs “more expensive.”
"We’re better off taking lots of people and moving them out of the US as opposed to keeping them inside the US," he said.
Yogi_G wrote:Grrrrrrrrrrrrrr.....![]()
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TCS fattens top official pay package by over rs 1 crore
And this given that the pay of employees has not had a significant hike in the last 3 years....no promotion no zilch....
Everybody was quite shocked to get the news....totally unexpected ofcourse. It looks like it was a freak accident and he fell in with nobody around. Really sad end to such a brilliant and good man. He lived just next to Palo Alto iirc (in one of the posh of poshest neighborhoods). Last met him in 2008.pandyan wrote:This is sadjust yesterday we were talking about this very same topic that lot of desis are buying pools without learning to swim and were joking that we would never venture beyond 3-4ft. It was very shocking to read this news in the morning. RIP.