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In this collection, the author presents kaleidoscopic imprints of
ordinary people's lives. It is about a father who wants to redeem
what he lost when he was his son's age, a drifter's search for
home, a man's wandering around a mirage, a schoolteacher's desire
to open a school where knowledge is not a burden. It is about
family budget that struggles to meet the demands of "want" and
"need." It is about a booklover and a bookseller who never
understood the difference between book reading and selling. It is
about searching something that is found within. It is about a man
who simply trusted, never argued nor defended or complained. It is
about a grandson's eagerness to connect with his grandparents. The
Rising Sun is Purnendu Ghosh's first published collection of
stories.
The book contains the proceedings of CAETS 2015 Convocation on
'Pathways to Sustainability: Energy, Mobility and Healthcare
Engineering' that was held on October 13-14, 2015 in New Delhi.
This 3 volume proceedings provide an international forum for
discussion and communication of engineering and technological
issues of common concern. This volume talks about 'Mobility' and
includes 14 chapters on diverse topics like creating sustainable
transportation systems, mobility of the future, unique engineering
features like Delhi metro, digitally re-imagining mobility, trends
and future strategies of transportation electrification, etc. The
contents of this book will be useful to researchers, professionals,
and policy makers alike.
This book is a collection of chapters reflecting the experiences
and achievements of some of the Fellows of the Indian National
Academy of Engineering (INAE). The book comprises essays that look
at reminiscences, eureka moments, inspirations, challenges and
opportunities in the journey of an engineering professional. The
chapters look at the paths successful engineering professionals
take towards self-realisation, the milestones they crossed, and the
goals they reached. The book contains 38 chapters on diverse topics
that truly reflect the way the meaningful mind of an engineer
works.
The biotechnology business in India with an increase from USD 500
million in 1997 and reaching an estimated USD 1 billion next year
health related prod ucts accounting for 60%, agro and veterinary
products together 15%, and con tract R&D, reagents, devices and
supplies adding up to the remaining 25% of which the diagnostics
share was about 10% of the total surely presented an encouraging
picture even five years ago. While volumes have increased, the pat
tern has not. According to a report, prepared by McKinsey & Co,
India's Phar maceutical industry including domestic and export
sales and contract services totals nearly USD 5 billion.
Furthermore, the company optimistically projects the growth to a
factor of five fold only if both the industry and the government
are able to put in place achievable solutions that must take care
of the formida ble obstacles preventing further growth. If this
assessment is correct, then the established transformation made by
IT growth should also provide the confi dence required by the high
expectations for biotechnology which have arisen in the country in
recent years. Some contributors to this are overenthusiastic these
are bureaucrats, some retired scientists and of course the
complacent politicians who have the least knowledge of what the new
biotechnology is all about. However, there are clear indications of
biotechnology growth demon strated by a few but rapidly expanding
biotech companies such as Biocon Ltd, Shantha Biotech (P) Ltd, Dr.
We live in the world where nothing is difficult, if there is a
market. There is therefore the dilemma of want and need. Technology
wants what life wants. Using technologies, it seems, it is possible
to do anything and produce anything. The centre of gravity of the
engineering profession is shifting. The world wants confident
engineers who can foresee and manage the unknown and unexpected
problems. Engineers are expected to understand global issues, and
the nuances of working in a culturally diverse space. They are
expected to appreciate, more than before, the human dimensions of
emerging technologies. There are many questions, such as - Do I
take pride in designing a thing and manufacturing it, as I take
pride in packaging it? Are we cultivating the right kind of
engineering mindset? What must a general engineering toolkit
contain? Are there enough challenging jobs in the manufacturing
industry to attract good engineers? Is it right to allow the
creation of future elites who have augmented themselves with
artificial intelligence and genetic engineering, without inventing
a way to manage their superhuman abilities? Can there be better
engineering than life itself? Should we be optimistic about the
future of technology? Are we working harder than we are required to
work? Can technology improve work-life balance? Is society ready to
accept exponential development challenges? These, and many such
issues are the concerns of science, engineering, technology and
society. This book is an attempt to deliberate upon these issues
for the welfare of humankind. Note: T&F does not sell or
distribute the Hardback in India, Pakistan, Nepal, Bhutan,
Bangladesh and Sri Lanka. This title is co-published with New India
Publishing Agency.
This book is a collection of chapters reflecting the experiences
and achievements of some of the Fellows of the Indian National
Academy of Engineering (INAE). The book comprises essays that look
at reminiscences, eureka moments, inspirations, challenges and
opportunities in the journey of an engineering professional. The
chapters look at the paths successful engineering professionals
take towards self-realisation, the milestones they crossed, and the
goals they reached. The book contains 38 chapters on diverse topics
that truly reflect the way the meaningful mind of an engineer
works.
The book contains the proceedings of CAETS 2015 Convocation on
'Pathways to Sustainability: Energy, Mobility and Healthcare
Engineering' that was held on October 13-14, 2015 in New Delhi.
This 3 volume proceedings provide an international forum for
discussion and communication of engineering and technological
issues of common concern. This volume talks about 'Mobility' and
includes 14 chapters on diverse topics like creating sustainable
transportation systems, mobility of the future, unique engineering
features like Delhi metro, digitally re-imagining mobility, trends
and future strategies of transportation electrification, etc. The
contents of this book will be useful to researchers, professionals,
and policy makers alike.
The biotechnology business in India with an increase from USD 500
million in 1997 and reaching an estimated USD 1 billion next year
health related prod ucts accounting for 60%, agro and veterinary
products together 15%, and con tract R&D, reagents, devices and
supplies adding up to the remaining 25% of which the diagnostics
share was about 10% of the total surely presented an encouraging
picture even five years ago. While volumes have increased, the pat
tern has not. According to a report, prepared by McKinsey & Co,
India's Phar maceutical industry including domestic and export
sales and contract services totals nearly USD 5 billion.
Furthermore, the company optimistically projects the growth to a
factor of five fold only if both the industry and the government
are able to put in place achievable solutions that must take care
of the formida ble obstacles preventing further growth. If this
assessment is correct, then the established transformation made by
IT growth should also provide the confi dence required by the high
expectations for biotechnology which have arisen in the country in
recent years. Some contributors to this are overenthusiastic these
are bureaucrats, some retired scientists and of course the
complacent politicians who have the least knowledge of what the new
biotechnology is all about. However, there are clear indications of
biotechnology growth demon strated by a few but rapidly expanding
biotech companies such as Biocon Ltd, Shantha Biotech (P) Ltd, Dr.
In this collection, the author presents kaleidoscopic imprints of
ordinary people's lives. It is about a father who wants to redeem
what he lost when he was his son's age, a drifter's search for
home, a man's wandering around a mirage, a schoolteacher's desire
to open a school where knowledge is not a burden. It is about
family budget that struggles to meet the demands of "want" and
"need." It is about a booklover and a bookseller who never
understood the difference between book reading and selling. It is
about searching something that is found within. It is about a man
who simply trusted, never argued nor defended or complained. It is
about a grandson's eagerness to connect with his grandparents. The
Rising Sun is Purnendu Ghosh's first published collection of
stories.
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