Category Archives: World Opinion

This Hyderabadi filmmaker made waves at Cannes 2016

RajaTELAN23may2016

Hyderabadi filmmaker Raja Pothineni is on a roll. His 15-minute short film, 60 Eight, premiered at this year’s Cannes Film Festival, to “an overwhelming response”. “I am absolutely stoked. I worked hard for this, and to be rewarded this way feels great,” enthuses Raja.

The film, written, edited and directed by Raja, revolves around John, who spends 52 years in a state of comatose, after having survived a near-fatal car accident when he was eight years old, and wakes up at 60, after a meeting with his childhood friend Sarah.

“It took me a whole year to make this film. Since it begins in the 1960s, I had to do a lot of research to make the scenes look accurate. Even small things, like sourcing medical equipment from that time, took a lot of time and effort. I also held seven-eight casting sessions to finalise the cast, since I wanted the actresses who portray the different ages of Sarah to look similar,” recalls Raja, throwing light on the extensive pre-production work that went into making the film.

All the hard work seems worth it though when the feedback is so encouraging, reckons Raja. “people who’ve watched the film tell me they loved the authentic the story-telling and the depth of the characters. I’m not getting carried away though. I’ve got to move forward and outdo myself; there is no time to rest on laurels.”

The response is affirmation enough for what Raja wants his style of film-making to be. “Authenticity is what I want. I don’t like movies that are pushed down our throats; the ones where emotions are squeezed out of every scene. The Indian audience is exposed to a lot of mainstream cinema and they’re aware now when the acting is manipulative. Mine is a more minimalistic approach and I try to be as invisible as possible. I let the cast react naturally without pre-conceived notions. That allows space for the audience to interpret freely,” says the Telugu boy spent most of his childhood in Vijayawada.

So, does he plan to foray into Tollywood? “Of course! Tollywood is where my roots are. I am working on two Telugu scripts. Nani and Tamannah are my favourite actors. In fact, I’d love to work with Nani in the future. His acting is just effortless,” admits Raja, who also reserves special praise for his cousin, actor Ram Pothineni .

“We talk very often and give each other a lot of feedback. I loved his work in Nenu… Sailaja. He is always evolving as an actor, and has a maturity that belies his age. But that doesn’t come as a surprise; he was always a very dedicated person, right from childhood,” he says, signing off.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News Home> City> Hyderabad / Deepa Joseph, TNN / May 21st, 2016

Cook inaugurates Apple Maps development office in Hyderabad

Apple’s CEO Tim Cook (L) with Telangana CM K Chandra Sekhar Rao after inauguration of Apple's development office in Hyderabad on Thursday. / PTI
Apple’s CEO Tim Cook (L) with Telangana CM K Chandra Sekhar Rao after inauguration of Apple’s development office in Hyderabad on Thursday. / PTI

Says this investment will accelerate Maps development and create up to 4,000 jobs.

Apple Inc on Thursday announced the opening of a new office here that will focus on development of Maps for its products including iPhone, iPad, Mac and Apple Watch.

The Californian tech giant said in a statement that this investment will accelerate Maps development and create up to 4,000 jobs.

Mum on quantum of investment

The company, however, did not disclose the quantum of investment that it intends to invest on the facility.

“We are thrilled to open this new office in Hyderabad which will focus on Maps development,” Apple CEO Tim Cook said.

“The talent here in the local area is incredible and we are looking forward to expanding our relationships and introducing more universities and partners to our platforms as we scale our operations,” he said.

Updating, adding new features

Apple has been continually updating and adding new features to Maps including 3D views, the Flyover feature and tools to help customers find convenient places to shop, eat and explore nearby areas, the statement said.

With iOS 9 Apple added Transit, offering a combination of trains, subways, buses and walking, which is already available for more than 300 cities around the world.

The new facility, located on the Waverock campus, will provide a world-class, LEED-certified home for the expanding Maps team, it added.

Honoured, says KCR

Telangana Chief Minister K. Chandrashekar Rao has said the State is honoured that Apple chose Hyderabad as a home for its Maps development office.

“This will create thousands of jobs here and is a testament to our proactive approach, quality infrastructure and the excellent talent base we have in the region,” he said.

RMSI is a global IT services company providing GIS, modelling and analytics and software services.

‘One of the most innovative firms’

CEO of RMSI Anup Jindal said, “Apple is one of the most innovative companies in the world. We are very proud they chose us to partner with for this important project.”

“We are experts in geospatial data and we will be hiring thousands of people from the local area to support this effort,” Mr. Jindal said.

Apple supports over 6,40,000 iOS app developer jobs and other positions related to the iOS ecosystem across India, the statement said.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> National / PTI / Hyderabad – May 19th, 2016

Healthcare startup raises $150,000

Hyderabad :

Life Circle Health Services, a T-Hub incubatee, announced here on Wednesday that it had raised an investment of USD 150,000 from a European company.

The funds will help Life Circle to deepen its services in the state capital as well as expand to the national capital region.

The startup will soon launch its services in New Delhi and aims to reach 20 cities in India by 2020. Apart from investment, GROUPE SOS, Europe’s leading healthcare service provider, will also be sharing technical knowledge and international best practices with Life Circle.

Jean-Marc Borello, founder-president of GROUPE SOS, said, “We are very excited to join hands with an Indian enterprise to develop home nursing services in India. GROUPE SOS has more than 30 years of experience in France where health services are among the best.”

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> States> Telangana / by Express News Service / May 12th, 2016

Hyderabad to host conference on India’s COP21 commitments

Hyderabad :

The Institute for Sustainable Communities (ISC) has been selected by the United States Department of State to organise a conference focused on implementing India’s COP21 commitments to be held here on June 24-25.

The conference, ‘Future Is Now: India from COP21 to Reality’, would include international experts and practitioners, environmental NGOs, in-country development organisations, finance experts, Indian companies and philanthropic organisations as well as India’s top national and state decision-makers, a media statement from the U S Consulate General Hyderabad said.

“The participants will explore India’s key climate change issues and opportunities in light of India’s Paris commitments,” it said.

ISC is partnering with the Center for Environment and Development to present the conference, which will feature Indian and US experts on topics such as clean energy, energy efficiency, climate finance, resilience, climate mitigation, air pollution and waste reduction, the statement said.

The Department of State’s Assistant Secretary for South and Central Asian Affairs, Nisha Desai Biswal, was quoted as saying, “India is a vital player in addressing climate change and we look forward to increasing our partnership to expand clean energy deployment and access.”

Steve Nicholas, Vice President of Urban Programs at ISC, said, “The Paris Agreement is an incredibly important opportunity to reduce emissions and implement green development projects in India. Connecting US and Indian leaders to each other is critical because those professional relationships will continue to pay dividends.”

“We’re honoured to be working with our colleagues in India to understand their challenges, share what we’ve learned, and talk about what’s possible,” he said.

Conference participants, who may include leaders from local government, industry, NGOs, academics, and national government officials, would have the opportunity to connect with their peers and share challenges, solutions and resources, the statement added.

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source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News Home> City> Hyderabad / PTI / May 09th, 2016

UoH Student Bags Baillie Gifford Prize Fellowship

Garima Goel
Garima Goel

Hyderabad :

A final year student of MA Political Science at the University of Hyderabad (UoH), Garima Goel has been selected as the Baillie Gifford prize fellow for the year 2016-17.

The fellowship is given to only one person in the world and she would be studying MRes in Contemporary India at King’s College, London.

“With the whole digitisation, there is a lot of data that is available as open source and it is kind of exciting. All I want to do is research on Indian politics and be close to the policies. I just don’t want to keep on writing and be of no use. Publishing papers is not my main aim, creating an impact with my work is what I am looking forward to and I intend to explore understudied topics within mainstream political science in India through a career in research and teaching,” Goel said.

When asked what made her took up research work, she said, “Last year, I was among the three students selected from UoH to do a study on transcultural studies at Heidelberg University, Germany. It is there, my interest for research started and now all I want to do is to carry out research work.”

Goel enjoys uncovering and answering questions related to Indian politics using open data and maps, which are increasingly available to researchers today. During her time at King’s, she will work on ‘None of the Above’ (NOTA) voting patterns in India’s elections under the supervision of Dr Louise Tillin.

“Politicians do not care much about NOTA as it has no impact on results. However, through my earlier research, I found out that there has been a significant rise in the use of NOTA and as many assume there is a specific pattern and not just ignorance the reason for usage of NOTA. Also, there is no co-relation between NOTA and turnout,” Goel, who has earlier studied NOTA during the Bihar elections, said.

The fellowship, worth up to 30,000 pounds, provides full financial support to one student at King’s India Institute for research-track Masters programme that imparts advanced training to develop a thesis under expert supervision.

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> Cities> Hyderabad / by Express News Service / May 06th, 2016

Telangana students in Indian contingent at ISEF

Three school scientists from Telangana will be part of Team India at the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair (ISEF) where more than 1,700 school students from over 75 countries will showcase their selected projects. The fair will be held at Phoenix, Arizona, U.S.A. from May 8 to 14.

The children – P. Meghana, D. Nikitha and D. Vamshi from Paramita School in Karimnagar – representing the Indian team met Chief Minister K. Chandrasekhar Rao, who asked them to meet him again and share their experiences once they come back from U.S.

The two students developed the project ‘Reflected Altitude Triangle’ under the guidance of Lalit Mohan Sahu.

The project went through various science fairs, starting from district level to national level. It also made a mark entering into the 102nd India Science Congress 2015 held at University of Mumbai last January.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> News> Cities> Hyderabad / by Special Correspondent / Hyderabad – May 05th, 2016

Maths model selected for world’s biggest science fair

A mathematics model called ‘reflected altitude triangle’ designed by P. Meghana, D. Nikhitha and D. Vamshi, class 10 students of Paramita High School in Karimnagar town, has been selected for the International Science and Engineering Fair (ISEF) which would be held in Phoenix, Arizona, U.S.A., from May 8 to 14.

The science project designed by the students under the guidance of teacher Lalith Mohan Sabhu had been on a winning spree at all science fairs – from district-level to national-level.

Recently, it was selected at the Initiative for Research and Innovation in Science (IRIS) at IIT-Delhi.

Only students from State

These students are the only ones from Telangana to showcase their model at the world’s biggest science fair in U.S.A. Paramita Educational Institutes’ chairman E. Prasada Rao congratulated the students for bringing repute to the school as well as the entire State.

The Telangana students’ model has been selected for the ISEF in U.S.A

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> National> Telangana / by Special Correspondent / Karimnagar – May 02nd, 2016

Jeb app bags NPCI award

Jeb, a mobile app developed by Hyderabad’s VSoft Technologies to facilitate easy, instant transfer of money as an alternative to cash payment, emerged the winner at a hackathon organised by National Payments Corporation of India (MPCI).

The programme, in which 3,819 teams participated, was held to commemorate the launch of NPCI’s payments infrastructure platform – Unified Payments Interface (UPI).

For a host of daily as well as regular payments, be it to purchase groceries, vegetables, paying auto-rickshaw fare, school fees and utility bills or depositing money in another account, the app can perform multiple tasks for which cash is used, says VSoft Technologies COO Dronamraju Srinivas.

Jeb, he says, is not a mobile wallet but a payment channel. It enables users to send and receive money as well as banks to compete with the wallets. The money remains in the customers’ account, earning daily interest until used, unlike the wallets where it is transferred to a third party. Users can add any bank account while interactions can be driven by voice or in their preferred regional language.

VSoft is in talks with a few banks – public, private and in the cooperative fold. The NPCI is yet to finalise the user charges. They are expected to be less than that for NEFT and RTGS, he adds.

City’s VSoft Technologies, the app developer, in talks with a few banks

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Cities> Hyderabad / by N. Ravi Kumar / Hyderabad – April 29th, 2016

A showcase of biodiversity of vegetation

Steeped in history:The entrance of Gandhari Vanam in Adilabad district – Photos: S. Harpal Singh
Steeped in history:The entrance of Gandhari Vanam in Adilabad district – Photos: S. Harpal Singh

Gandhari Vanam in Mancherial town will soon have a museum showcasing millions of years of biodiversity of Adilabad.

Gandhari Vanam, a nature park near Mancherial town in Adilabad, is where you can go millions of years back in time. The 174-million-year-old tree fossils to be exhibited in a section of the soon to come up facility will help you visualise what the district must have looked like back then.

Steeped in history:  Mancherial Divisional Forest Officer B. Prabhakar observing a Jurassic-era tree fossil at the nature park.– Photos: S. Harpal Singh
Steeped in history: Mancherial Divisional Forest Officer B. Prabhakar observing a Jurassic-era tree fossil at the nature park.– Photos: S. Harpal Singh

“That was the time when the giant dinosaurs roamed here, thriving on these coniferous trees. The Pranahita-Godavari valley of upper Gondwana is unique as it has preserved many of nature’s components from the era in its 3,000-metre thick sediments deposited over a period of 200 million years,” said Mancherial Divisional Forest Officer B. Prabhakar, pointing out the uniqueness of the nature park being developed by the Telangana Forest Department at a cost of Rs. 3.6 crore.

The park, located on the Mancherial-Mandamarri main road on the fringes of the coal town, is named Gandhari Vanam as the Gandhari fort is located close to it. It is a 350-acre facility divided into three parts.

“A 20-acre plot on the left side of the road (coming from Mancherial) has been developed as a picnic spot with ornamental plants, apart from a host of things. At least 500 visitors come here on weekends,” the DFO said.

The second 50-acre enclosure will become a good forest, and the department has plans to make it a deer park and an aviary in the near future. The third section, and the most important one, is the 280-acre facility on the other side of the road. It is like a repository and museum of the huge local biodiversity in terms of vegetation.

“Adilabad forests at one time had boasted of at least 500 types of trees, and we are planting many of these, which, for the sake of awareness and convenience, have been segregated into a few sections. For instance, we will have a medicinal plant section with 250 species, and others which will have trees linked with horoscope and nine planets,” Mr. Prabhakar disclosed.

For nature enthusiasts, Gandhari Vanam also has a walking track, while a boating facility and a couple of check dams are coming up. The authorities have also put up boards with information regarding the given sections, trees and fossils for the benefit of people. “We have designed the park to be educative too. People should know about nature, what it was and what it should be,” the DFO said.

The 280-acre facility is like a repository and museum of the biodiversity in terms of vegetation

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> National> Telangana / by S. Harpal Singh / Mancherial (Adilabad District) / April 25th, 2016

The Deccan’s ‘precious nine’ shine on like the Kohinoor

File photo of the 45.52-carat Hope Diamond at the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History in Washington. / Reuters
File photo of the 45.52-carat Hope Diamond at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History in Washington.
/ Reuters

Legendary diamonds mined by the Qutub Shahis are on display in Washington, Paris and Moscow.

It is not just Kohinoor; nine other famous diamonds left the shores of India and these are now displayed in museums in Washington, Moscow, Paris and Istanbul, besides forming a part of the Iranian crown jewels.

The precious nine, all categorised as legendary diamonds and mined by the Qutub Shahis of the Deccan, are the Hope Diamond, Hortensia, Darya-i-Noor, Noor-ul-Ain, Orlov (also called Orlof), Regent, Sancy, Shah Diamond and Spoonmaker’s, says V. Madhavan, who worked as a Professor of Geology in the Kakatiya University.

While the 45.5 carat Hope diamond is currently on display at the Smithsonian in Washington DC, the 190 carat Orlov diamond, a bluish-green gem, is now part of Moscow’s Diamond Treasury.

On the other hand, the 140.6 carat Regent, 55.2 carat Sancy and 20 carat Hortensia are now at the Louvre museum in Paris.

Two pink diamonds, the 182 carat Darya-i-Noor and 60 carat Noor-ul-Ain are part of the Iranian crown jewels while the 88.7 carat Shah Diamond and 86 carat Spoonmaker’s are housed in the Diamond Fund of the Kremlin and Topkapi Palace in Istanbul respectively.

Origins a mystery

Prof. Madhavan, who has studied diamond mining for nearly six decades, says that by all historical accounts, the Kohinoor was mined by the Kakatiyas when Rani Rudrama Devi headed the kingdom, its headquarters in present day Warangal.

Kohinoor’s exact vintage, right from its discovery, continues to be a mystery. However, “There is a general consensus among historians that it was found at Kolluru in the late 13th century in present day Guntur district of Andhra Pradesh,” he said adding that Kolluru was part of the Kakatiya kingdom.

Former Professor of History at the University of Hyderabad, V. Ramakrishna, said the Manual of “Kistna District in the Presidency of Madras”, written by Gordon Mackenzie and published in 1883, also indicated that the Kohinoor was found in Kolluru, then part of Krishna district.

Pages 244-247 refer to diamond mining in the district in general and the Kohinoor in particular. The manual however, says that the gem was mined by Qutub Shahis and not the Kakatiyas.

Another book, A Study of the History and Culture of Andhras, by noted historian K. Satyanarayana and published in 1982, also speaks of the Kohinoor being found in Kolluru.

According to Prof. Madhavan, India was the only producer of diamonds in the world till 1725 AD when they were mined in Brazil. Later in 1870, diamonds were explored in South Africa. Marco Polo, who visited India in the 13th century, talks in his travelogue of an inland kingdom ruled by a queen (Rudrama Devi)… “which produced all the diamonds in the world”.

At the time of its discovery, the Kohinoor was the largest diamond in the world. But no longer. In 1905, workmen at the Premier Mines in South Africa unearthed the 3106 carats (621 grams) Cullinan diamond, which remains the largest so far. It was named after Sir Thomas Cullinan, the founder of Premier Mines.

The original weight of Kohinoor was stated to be 793 carats (158.6 gm). In the 17th Century, emperor Aurangazeb wanted to reduce its size to add to its lustre.

He tasked Horenso Borgia, a Venetian lapidary with the job, but he cut the diamond down to just 186 carats and invited a heavy fine.

At present, the weight of Kohinoor, meaning mountain of light, is 105.6 carats.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> News> Cities> Hyderabad / Prashanth Chintala / Hyderabad – April 23rd, 2016