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TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 2009

Bangalore: At Microsoft’s research centre in a leafy lane in India’s tech capital, a new generation of researchers are being groomed half a world away from the software giant’s sprawling headquarters in Seattle.

Complete with beanbags and coffee served in steel tumblers, the centre is helping change the perception that India is no place for top-end research and development.

Staffed with about 60 full-time researchers, many of them Indians with PhDs from top universities in the US, the centre is at the cutting edge of Microsoft’s R&D. It covers seven areas of research including mobility and cryptography.

Its success, including developing a popular tool for Microsoft’s new search engine Bing, underscores the potential of R&D in India at a time when cost-conscious firms are keen to offshore to save money by using talented researchers abroad.

Showing off the Bing tool which enables searches for locations with incomplete or even incorrect addresses, B Ashok, a director of a research unit at the centre, said the innovation would never have taken root if the R&D had been done in the US.

“It was completely inspired by the Indian environment, but is applicable worldwide,” he said.

While India might seem like a natural location to expand offshoring into R&D, it is hampered by some serious structural problems that range from not enough home grown researchers to a lack of government support.

India produces about 300,000 computer science graduates a year. Yet it produces only about 100 computer science PhDs, a small fraction of the 1,500-2,000 that get awarded in the US, or China, every year.

“Students here are not exposed to research from an early age, faculties are not exposed to research and there’s no career path for innovation because there’s a lot of pressure to get a ‘real’ job,” said Vidya Natampally, head of strategy at the Microsoft India Research Centre.

With few government incentives and an education system that emphasises rote learning, India lacks the kind of environment found in say, Silicon Valley, where universities, venture capitalists and startups encourage innovation.

“China has a policy in place for R&D; we don’t,” Natampally said, adding that India could move up the value chain faster if even a small percentage of its engineering graduates went into research.

The small numbers of PhDs and the lack of government incentives for India’s fledgling R&D sector are blunting the country’s edge, analysts warn.

Competition

Rival China has already pulled ahead with more than 1,100 R&D centres compared to less than 800 in India, despite lingering concerns about rule of law and intellectual property rights (IPR).

Aside from providing funding to encourage students to complete their PhDs, China also offers fiscal incentives such as tax breaks for R&D centres and special economic zones provide infrastructure for hi-tech and R&D industries.

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Sriram Said:


On the engineering side , we need to redefine Phds. Most of the time , they solve well formed problems given by their coaches. We need to give more emphasis for phd candidates on the right problem creation/definition than merely solving them. Any well formed problem can be resolved by Btechs or Mtechs at the most. What is expected of Phds (from Eng side) is to think globally , create well defined problems and guide MTechs to resolve them and integrate multiple such problems/solutions/components towards a solution or a product. This could be in a well defined area. They need to be given training in Market study/research. Even while selecting candidates for Phds , rather than selecting on the basis of Mtech grades , they should be made to present their ideas/areas of research and look at their vision. If we do this India can occupy more than 60% of CTOs position across the world corporations. Sriram

Posted On 7/21/2009 4:03:40 PM