Because of abundance of skilled resources and global economy downturn , Many global cos. are moving their R&D to India. Outsourcing to India would increase to cut down costs.
Global technology companies are stepping up their research and development work in India. Here are some of the things they have been doing:
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MICROSOFT
– Microsoft employs 1,500 people at its Indian R&D center. It started off with 20 people about a decade ago. – Some of the work for key Microsoft projects such as its search engine Bing and the upcoming Windows 7 operating system was done in India. -
SAP
– SAP Labs India, the company’s largest R&D center outside Germany, employs 4,200 people. It does two-fifths of SAP’s global enterprise resource planning development.
– Half of the global development of SAP’s customer relationship management software such as CRM 7.0 was done in India, as well as a fifth of the development of SAP Business ByDesign. -
GOOGLE
– Bangalore was Google’s first R&D center outside the United States. – Google Map Maker, a global product conceived and developed by the Indian engineering team, allows users to add or edit features, such as roads, businesses, parks, schools, apartment buildings and localities.
– News Archive Search helps users search historical archives for events, people or ideas and get a sense of how they have been described over time. The product was developed in India and deployed on a global scale. -
IBM
– International Business Machines has said it will invest $100 million in global mobile services research over the next five years. The majority of the research for the project would be directed from India. -
INTEL
– Intel’s Digital Enterprise Group’s efforts have resulted in the company’s first six-core processor, the Intel Xeon Processor 7400 series, currently the highest-performing server chip that Intel offers.
– Its Corporate Technology Group developed the world’s first programmable processor delivering teraflops performance from its Bangalore center. -
HEWLETT-PACKARD
– HP engineers in Bangalore contributed to the HP Dynamic Smart Cooling technology that cools systems in data centers on a customized basis and saves energy. The system was tested at HP’s Palo Alto headquarters and deployed first in Bangalore. It is now deployed globally. -
CISCO SYSTEMS
– Cisco has filed more than 600 patents from India. (Reporting by S. John Tilak and Sayantani Ghosh in Bangalore; Editing by Mike Miller and Himani Sarkar)
RPT-FACTBOX-Multinational companies expand tech R&D in India | Reuters