Innovation has begun in India
My feeling is that in India, the age of innovation has begun. I am hearing directly from multiple start ups with Best, New and Emerging prototype technology / inventors in India and worldwide. Isn't Nasscom, the high-tech association that holds the newest crop of Indian innovators? I focus on these true innovators because they are intent on taking India out of poverty. India is now spawning large numbers of innovators concentrating on solving poor-world problems and cloud-based technology tools and open-source platforms that are enabling Indian innovators to do this with little capital. I know of several genius's with some of the most absolutely fascinating, new, emerging and best technologies I have seen to date and all (with green and renewable policy standards of operation). They all could use funding! As a result, they are much more willing to try, fail and try again just the same way they have been doing it in Silicon Valley San Francisco South Bay Area (SOLYNDRA). So what I am seeing is a merger here between ET, IT and ID. Seems like a lot of jobs are just sitting on the shelf.
There is nothing that India needs more than an energy technology (ET) revolution that would deliver low cost, reliable power to millions suffering from energy poverty. If every village had some reliable power, plus access to high speed Internet (IT), hundreds of millions of Indians would be able to live locally but act globally --- that is, they would be able to remain in their villages yet have access to the education and markets that might enable them an escape from poverty and not be forced to join hordes of the megaslums of the megacities like Mumbai or Kolkata. Another drawback is that world investors are not "quick on the draw" to finance start-ups (in any country) without Assets and PPA's, so they instead fund the larger organizations with a branded name, working factories and contracted jobs in place. I believe this is narrow thinking and poor judgment. My approach is adverse to funding the largest in the world. Rather, I choose to represent and harvest some of the brightest minds and cutting edge technologies for future current and future adaptations to the world's energy crisis. Give the small guys a chance and they will not be so small anymore, heck I am a small guy too and nobody pays me for my thoughts. What happened to "A penny for your thoughts"? With the cost of living as high as any person has ever endured maybe, the penny went up to a one hundred dollar British sterling pound note?
There is nothing that India needs more than an energy technology (ET) revolution that would deliver low cost, reliable power to millions suffering from energy poverty. If every village had some reliable power, plus access to high speed Internet (IT), hundreds of millions of Indians would be able to live locally but act globally --- that is, they would be able to remain in their villages yet have access to the education and markets that might enable them an escape from poverty and not be forced to join hordes of the megaslums of the megacities like Mumbai or Kolkata. Another drawback is that world investors are not "quick on the draw" to finance start-ups (in any country) without Assets and PPA's, so they instead fund the larger organizations with a branded name, working factories and contracted jobs in place. I believe this is narrow thinking and poor judgment. My approach is adverse to funding the largest in the world. Rather, I choose to represent and harvest some of the brightest minds and cutting edge technologies for future current and future adaptations to the world's energy crisis. Give the small guys a chance and they will not be so small anymore, heck I am a small guy too and nobody pays me for my thoughts. What happened to "A penny for your thoughts"? With the cost of living as high as any person has ever endured maybe, the penny went up to a one hundred dollar British sterling pound note?
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