Giving employees weekends was a mistake
Infosys Co-Founder Narayana Murthy wants people to work 70 hours
IT outsourcer Infosys’s founder Narayana Murthy thinks that 70-hour work weeks are essential for India and that allowing staff the weekend off was a mistake.
India surrenders to Musk and Amazon colonialism
Easier than fighting
India seems to have forgotten its history with the British East India Company and is giving its satellite spectrum without a fundraising auction.
Foxconn signs $37 million chip deal in India
New chip packaging and testing business
Foxconn is teaming up with Indian software and engineering firm HCL Group to set up a chip packaging and testing business in India in a deal worth $37.2 million.
Women say Tata to Tata
Gender diversity set back years
Tata Consultancy Services’ (TCS) decision to end its work-from-home policy is pushing its female employees to quit.
India spends $2.1 billion to lure laptop makers
You don't need China
India has put $2.1 billion on the table to attract makers of laptops, tablets and other hardware to the South Asian nation as companies look to diversify supply chains beyond China.
Half of Apple's Indian made cases rejected
China was much better
Apple's attempts to move its production from China to India got a swift kick up the bottom line after it discovered that more than half the cases made in the Indian plants were being rejected.
India creates its own national mobile OS
Worried about US colonialism
India is developing a national operating system (OS) in a bid to reduce its reliance on foreign software and enhance its digital sovereignty.
Apple wants to shift a quarter of its production to India
China getting too problematic
Fruity cargo-cult Apple wants to shift its production to a place where it will have less trouble with the authorities and has settled on a place which is great for worker pay and conditions -- India.
Foxconn invests $19.4 billion to make semiconductors in India
China gets problematic
Foxconn will invest $19.4 billion to make semiconductors in India and will work with the mega mining outfit Vedanta to make it so.
India discovers that Wackypedia editors have too much power
Apparently, they can declare people’s political affiliation
India’s IT minister has dared to take on the fake penis experts and those with bogus PHDs who alter reality to match their own sad model of the universe on Wackypedia.