Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
And FYI every major IT company has a development center in India
Yes we agree abt tons of research papers published in China, but r they printed in mandarin.? hahahaha
that is because you are cheap.
show me some computer science or software engineering research paper from indian universities published on respectful journals/conferences. I didn't read any in the past 5 years!
not any single one is from india.
A myth called the Indian programmer
By avinashsingh
They are the poster boys of matrimonial classifieds. They are paid handsomely, perceived to be intelligent and travel abroad frequently. Single-handedly, they brought purpose to the otherwise sleepy city of Bangalore.
Indian software engineers are today the face of a third-world rebellion. But what exactly do they do? Thats a disturbing question. Last week, during the annual fair of the software industrys apex body Nasscom, no one uttered a word about Indias programmers.
The event, which brought together software professionals from around the world, used up all its 29 sessions to discuss prospects to improve the performance of software companies. Panels chose to debate extensively on subjects like managing innovation, business growth and multiple geographies.
But there was nothing on programmers, who you would imagine are the driving force behind the success of the Indian software companies. Perhaps you imagined wrong. It is an explosive truth that local software companies wont accept.
Most software professionals in India are not programmers, they are mere coders, says a senior executive from a global consultancy firm, who has helped Nasscom in researching its industry reports.
In industry parlance, coders are akin to smart assembly line workers as opposed to programmers who are plant engineers. Programmers are the brains, the glorious visionaries who create things. Large software programmes that often run into billions of lines are designed and developed by a handful of programmers.
Coders follow instructions to write, evaluate and test small components of the large program. As a computer science student in IIT Mumbai puts it if programming requires a post graduate level of knowledge of complex algorithms and programming methods, coding requires only high school knowledge of the subject.
Coding is also the grime job. It is repetitive and monotonous. Coders know that. They feel stuck in their jobs. They have fallen into the trap of the software hype and now realise that though their status is glorified in the society, intellectually they are stranded.
Companies do not offer them stock options anymore and their salaries are not growing at the spectacular rates at which they did a few years ago.
There is nothing new to learn from the job I am doing in Pune. I could have done it with some training even after passing high school, says a 25-year-old who joined Infosys after finishing his engineering course in Nagpur.
A Microsoft analyst says, Like our manufacturing industry, the Indian software industry is largely a process driven one. That should speak for the fact that we still dont have a domestic software product like Yahoo or Google to use in our daily lives.
IIT graduates have consciously shunned Indias best known companies like Infosys and TCS, though they offered very attractive salaries. Last year, from IIT Powai, the top three Indian IT companies got just 10 students out of the 574 who passed out.
The best computer science students prefer to join companies like Google and Trilogy. Krishna Prasad from the College of Engineering, Guindy, Chennai, who did not bite Infosys offer, says, The entrance test to join TCS is a joke compared to the one in Trilogy. That speaks of what the Indian firms are looking for.
A senior TCS executive, who requested anonymity, admitted that the perception of coders is changing even within the company. It is a gloomy outlook. He believes it has a lot to do with business dynamics.
The executive, a programmer for two decades, says that in the late 70s and early 80s, software drew a motley set of professionals from all kinds of fields.
In the mid-90s, as onsite projects increased dramatically, software companies started picking all the engineers they could as the US authorities granted visas only to graduates who had four years of education after high school.
After Y2K, as American companies discovered Indias cheap software professionals, the demand for engineers shot up, the executive says. Most of these engineers were coders. They were almost identical workers who sat long hours to write line after line of codes, or test a fraction of a programme.
They did not complain because their pay and perks were good. Now, the demand for coding has diminished, and there is a churning.
Over the years, due to the improved communication networks and increased reliability of Indian firms, projects that required a worker to be at a clients site, say in America, are dwindling in number. And with it the need for engineers who have four years of education after high school.
Graduates from non-professional courses, companies know, can do the engineers job equally well. Also, over the years, as Indian companies have already coded for many common applications like banking, insurance and accounting, they have created libraries of code which they reuse.
Top software companies have now started recruiting science graduates who will be trained alongside engineers and deployed in the same projects. The CEO of Indias largest software company TCS, S Ramadorai, had earlier explained, The core programming still requires technical skills.
But, there are other jobs we found that can be done by graduates. NIITs Arvind Thakur says, We have always maintained that it is the aptitude and not qualifications that is vital for programming. In fact, there are cases where graduate programmers have done better than the ones from the engineering stream.
Software engineers, are increasingly getting dejected. Sachin Rao, one of the coders stuck in the routine of a job that does not excite him anymore, has been toying with the idea of moving out of Infosys but cannot find a different kind of break, given his coding experience.
He sums up his plight by vaguely recollecting a story in which thousands of caterpillars keep climbing a wall, the height of which they dont know. They clamber over each other, fall, start again, but keep climbing. They dont know that they can eventually fly.
Rao cannot remember how the story ends but feels the coders of India today are like the caterpillars who plod their way through while there are more spectacular ways of reaching the various destinations of life..
A myth called the Indian programmer miles to go
Yea right companys like Wipro ,IBM,Infosys ,Mahindra Tech ,Oracle etc are recruiting Indian enggs for code working
i, myself work in ibm... cant stop laughing at some arguments...........keep it up guys............
idune
you quoted a friggin blog!
A myth called the Indian programmer miles to go
This "article" has a pile of unsubstantiated bull crap.
"Most software professionals in India are not programmers, they are mere coders, says a senior executive from a global consultancy firm"
who is this guy? - "Mr. Unamed sources"??
Or this:
A Microsoft analyst says, Like our manufacturing industry, the Indian software industry is largely a process driven one. That should speak for the fact that we still dont have a domestic software product like Yahoo or Google to use in our daily lives.
Do we have an official statement from Microsoft on this? If not the article is bogus. Who is this "analyst" by the way?
you are right.
as of today, india couldn't develop any software that can support simultaneous online user of 10 million, not to mention a scale of 100 million as demoed by Tencent's QQ
not happy with such facts? then just show me your indian developed software (any single software) that are being used by >100 million users on a daily basis.
are you going to challenge the well known fact that indians "still don’t have a domestic software product like Yahoo or Google to use in our daily lives"?
no troll, let's focus on the fact brought up by you - is there any indian made domestic software product like Yahoo or Google?