Software Product Development

Software Product Development

Tarun Upadhyay   //  Tarun is still just flatly amazed by the power of the Internet, its ability to level the field and help the little guy compete with the biggest organizations.

Those little guy success stories are what drags him to work every morning and he lives a small part of that little guy's dream working for hCentive.

Prior to co-founding hCentive, Tarun served as a co-founder and CTO for GlobalLogic - an outsourcing service provider for large, complex products and software - which grew from 0 to 400 engineers while he was the CTO.

Prior to Globallogic, he was co-founder and CTO of Pinelabs - an India-based provider of Loyalty and Payment solutions using Smart Cards. While Tarun was CTO, Pinelabs grew from a drawing board idea to a suite of successful products running at many fortune 500 companies handling millions of credit card transactions per day.

Tarun holds an M.S in Mathematics and Computer Applications from Indian Institute of Technology, Delhi, India.

Nov 18 / 12:13am

Top Visited websites in India in 2008

  • Email --> Yahoo
  • Instant Messaging --> Yahoo
  • Job Search --> Naukri
  • News --> Yahoo
  • Search in English --> Google
  • Search in local language --> Google
  • Travel --> Yatra
  • Non-travel shopping --> Ebay
  • Real Estate --> Google
  • Financial News --> Money Control
  • Stock Trading --> ICICIDirect
  • Matrimony --> BharatMatrimony
  • Friendship / Dating --> Orkut
  • Sports --> CricInfo
  • Music --> Raaga
  • Buy movie / cd --> Rediff
Source: JuxtConsulting
Filed under  //  india   internet   Startup & Entrepreneurship  

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Nov 17 / 11:10pm

India Internet user statistics for 2008

According to JuxtConsulting: [caption id="" align="aligncenter" width="600" caption="Random Guy on Phone"]
[/caption]
  • There are 35 M internet users in India (people who use internet more than once a month). 90% of them use internet daily.
  • All but 5 M of these are in urban areas.
  • This means that 9% of Indian urban population uses internet at least once a month.
  • Indian regular urban internet users grew at 19% compared to last year.
  • 72 % of internet users have a computer at home.
  • Most common activities on the net are email, job search, IM, News, Sports, downloading music or movies, social networking and matrimonial search, in that order.
  • 34% of users visit vernacular content regularly (compared to 12% last year).
  • YonY growth is linear not exponential, as we hoped.
India Online Market
  • India has 8m active online shoppers. (those who have purchased something online in last 6 months)
  • About 24% of them have never bought anything besides railway tickets. 49% of them have bought nothing but air or train tickets.
  • Books, clothes and CD/DVDs are the other big selling categories.
More at IBEF .
Filed under  //  india   internet   Startup & Entrepreneurship  

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Mar 4 / 9:41pm

Analysis of Indian Budget 2007

Ajay Shah has the best analysis of this year's Indian Budget. Highlights:
  • Most depressing news is ban on futures trading in wheat and rice. Quoting Business Standard : It was a jarring reminder that India may be an IT superpower with a $1 trillion GDP, but there are many people at the top who are still thinking in the 1970s mentality of blaming futures traders, hoarders, profiteers and speculators for an economy-wide mismatch between supply and demand.
  • Planned fiscal deficit for the new year is 3.23%. This is higher than historical target of keeping it below 3%. Higher deficit means government is spending more and it needs to either borrow or increase money supply. Both of them cause increase in inflation. Government has deliberately chosen the route of increasing "plan" expenditure as a populist measure in place of containing inflation.
  • Peak customs rates have been decreased. This should reduce local prices and increase competitiveness.
  • Other than the above, there is no progress on tax reforms.
  • Expenditure on "plan" outlays have been dramatically increased (3.9% to 4.3% of GDP in last two years) while non-plan outlay is decreased (5.4% to 4.8% in last two years). Overall federal expenditure declined from 14.2% to 13.8% of GDP in two years.
  • Plan expenditure is on schemes like "National Rural Health Mission (NRHM)" while non-plan expenditure is on things like salaries for police and teachers. The game-plan in election year is to take credit for launching schemes like NRHM. There is little evidence that these schemes work.
  • There is some fresh thinking on education. There is a new scholarship program that will give INR 6000/year (a big enough scholarship for most families in India) to 100k students every year in grade 9, 10, 11, 12 (a total of 400k students nation-wide). This should allow the best 400k students in the country to get a decent education. (If implemented correctly).
Filed under  //  budget   india   money   Travel and Life  

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Jan 2 / 2:03am

List of Indian Holidays for Outlook/Mozilla/Netscape

I created this iCalendar File of holidays in my organization. Since the format is iCal, it is fairly standard and can be imported into a variety of calendar clients including Outlook and Mozilla (Netscape). To import the list of holidays in Outlook: a) copy and paste the text below the line "---" into notepad or some other text editor. Save it with an extension .ics. b) In your Outlook , chose File->Import and Export->Import an icalendar or vCalendar file c) Press Next. d) Select the saved .ics file e) Press OK you are done. To add or delete holidays from the list, just cut and paste text between BEGIN:VEVENT and END:VEVENT. The text follow below ------------- BEGIN:VCALENDAR PRODID:-//Microsoft Corporation//Outlook 11.0 MIMEDIR//EN VERSION:2.0 METHOD:PUBLISH BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20040101 DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20040102 TRANSP:TRANSPARENT SEQUENCE:0 UID:040000008200E00074C5B7101A82E00800000000E0147E14C5CFC3010000000000000000100 00000104E25149161CF43A2341DC33E42C602 DTSTAMP:20031231T120945Z SUMMARY:Induslogic India Holiday : New Year's Day PRIORITY:5 X-MICROSOFT-CDO-IMPORTANCE:1 CLASS:PUBLIC END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20040126 DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20040127 TRANSP:TRANSPARENT SEQUENCE:0 UID:040000008200E00074C5B7101A82E00800000000E0147E14C5CFC3010000000000000000100 00000104E25149161CF43A2341DC33E42C603 DTSTAMP:20031231T120945Z SUMMARY:Induslogic India Holiday : Indian Republic Day PRIORITY:5 X-MICROSOFT-CDO-IMPORTANCE:1 CLASS:PUBLIC END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20040305 DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20040306 TRANSP:TRANSPARENT SEQUENCE:0 UID:040000008200E00074C5B7101A82E00800000000E0147E14C5CFC3010000000000000000100 00000104E25149161CF43A2341DC33E42C604 DTSTAMP:20031231T120945Z SUMMARY:Induslogic India Holiday : Holi : Festival of Colors PRIORITY:5 X-MICROSOFT-CDO-IMPORTANCE:1 CLASS:PUBLIC END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20040409 DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20040410 TRANSP:TRANSPARENT SEQUENCE:0 UID:040000008200E00074C5B7101A82E00800000000E0147E14C5CFC3010000000000000000100 00000104E25149161CF43A2341DC33E42C605 DTSTAMP:20031231T120945Z SUMMARY:Induslogic India Holiday : Good Friday PRIORITY:5 X-MICROSOFT-CDO-IMPORTANCE:1 CLASS:PUBLIC END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20041022 DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20041023 TRANSP:TRANSPARENT SEQUENCE:0 UID:040000008200E00074C5B7101A82E00800000000E0147E14C5CFC3010000000000000000100 00000104E25149161CF43A2341DC33E42C606 DTSTAMP:20031231T120945Z SUMMARY:Induslogic India Holiday : Dussehra PRIORITY:5 X-MICROSOFT-CDO-IMPORTANCE:1 CLASS:PUBLIC END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20041111 DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20041113 TRANSP:TRANSPARENT SEQUENCE:0 UID:040000008200E00074C5B7101A82E00800000000E0147E14C5CFC3010000000000000000100 00000104E25149161CF43A2341DC33E42C607 DTSTAMP:20031231T120945Z SUMMARY:Induslogic India Holiday : Diwali : Festival of Lights (Five day holiday) PRIORITY:5 X-MICROSOFT-CDO-IMPORTANCE:1 CLASS:PUBLIC END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20041115 DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20041116 TRANSP:TRANSPARENT SEQUENCE:0 UID:040000008200E00074C5B7101A82E00800000000E0147E14C5CFC3010000000000000000100 00000104E25149161CF43A2341DC33E42C608 DTSTAMP:20031231T120945Z SUMMARY:Induslogic India Holiday : Id-ul-Fitr (Five day holiday contd.) PRIORITY:5 X-MICROSOFT-CDO-IMPORTANCE:1 CLASS:PUBLIC END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20041126 DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20041127 TRANSP:TRANSPARENT SEQUENCE:0 UID:040000008200E00074C5B7101A82E00800000000E0147E14C5CFC3010000000000000000100 00000104E25149161CF43A2341DC33E42C609 DTSTAMP:20031231T120945Z SUMMARY:Induslogic India Holiday : Guru Nanak's BirthDay PRIORITY:5 X-MICROSOFT-CDO-IMPORTANCE:1 CLASS:PUBLIC END:VEVENT BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20041224 DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20041225 TRANSP:TRANSPARENT SEQUENCE:0 UID:040000008200E00074C5B7101A82E00800000000E0147E14C5CFC3010000000000000000100 00000104E25149161CF43A2341DC33E42C610 DTSTAMP:20031231T120945Z SUMMARY:Induslogic India Holiday : Christmas PRIORITY:5 X-MICROSOFT-CDO-IMPORTANCE:1 CLASS:PUBLIC END:VEVENT END:VCALENDAR
Filed under  //  import   india   outlook   Productivity & Tools  

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Dec 9 / 1:59am

Review of Reliance Internet Connectivity

So, when I left for Bangalore to speak at Linx/Banglore 2003, I decided to give reliance mobile internet connectivity a try. Given that most hotels in India still do not offer high-speed internet and one has to content with dialup (which is expensive), I wondered if a mobile connection would be any better. I searched around and found Reliance gives a viable alternative on their CDMA 1xRTT network. The advertised speed is upto 144 kbps and the price is INR 24/hour (52cents/hour) - billed per second - with first 400 minutes free. Given that Reliance network is avaialble almost anywhere in India, what could have been better than this? (Okay, okay. speeds of 144Mbps and price of 52 cents / month could have been better but you got the point). I also thought I would be able to dial in from airport lounges (and taxi cabs!!) to check my mail. This looked like perfect Nirvana!! So, I borrowed a Reliance phone from my company (they have a bunch of them which they bought for a project) and bought an INR1200 ($26) USB-to-phone connection cable. And was all set to dial-in. The initial experience was good. With in minutes, the phone was registered and dialed in on the network and my laptop was downloading at 128 kbps. Works from the standard dialler on windows (and from what I have heard - on linux and Mac too). I happily used this to check my early morning mail at delhi airport lounge and was very satisfied. I also later used in cab in Bangalore (it was about an hour long ride in the traffic) to sent out the mails that I wrote on the plane. However, there was one annoying problem!! To optimise dialup time the network makes the connection "dormant" as soon as you are idle for 15 seconds. This meant that if no data has travelled for 15 seconds on the network then while the computer is fooled to believe that the connection is there, in reality it is disconnected. While you do not pay for connection time from hereon, it also means that the next request to the network will take longer (since it will require setting up the connection again). This got even worse when I reached Bangalore as this was outskirts of the city and the connection was not good and it took longer (about 7-8 seconds compared with 1-2 seconds in delhi) to connect. This caused my browser to timeout ocassionaly. This would have been okay, if this 15 second interval was configurable somewhere but it was not (yes, I tried at+cta=255 etc) and it seems this was hard-coded somewhere on the network. Also, the technology is not perfect and ocassionaly the network was not able to sense that I want a reconnect and then I need to redial as I if there is a way to force the phone to get out of dormant mode, I could not figure that out. One alternative was to just leave a large download on all the time to keep the connection going but I felt guitly using it. I also realised that the speed deteriotes as the connection lenght increases and the average that I could manage was about 50-60 kbps in off-peak hours (night and weekends) and about 20-30 kbps during day time. Nothing to boast about but almost an alternative to dialup which was available anywhere. Inspite of these flaws, I do plan to keep a reliance phone and a data cable handy in my laptop case just in case I need to access internet from any place where no dialup is available.
Filed under  //  india   internet   Money   Productivity & Tools   reliance   reviews   Travel and Life  

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