Daily Archives: June 19, 2014

Microsoft Ventures may invest in Hyderabad startup NowFloats for India foray

New Delhi :

Microsoft Ventures is in talks with a Hyderabad-based startup NowFloats, which if successful will mark the first investment in India by the early stage investment arm of the global software maker.

The deal could see an investment of up to $ 2,50,000 in the two-year old company according to three people with knowledge of the developments.

NowFloats focuses on helping small and medium enterprises (SMEs) to create and maintain a digital presence through a basic text message without the need for a smartphone. The company, incubated at Microsoft’s Bangalore-based accelerator, has also launched a mobile app, which allows users to discover businesses and deals, based on their location.

The transaction is expected to be completed by end-August, according to sources privy to the talks.

In an email response to a query by ET, a spokeswoman for Microsoft Ventures said the seed fund has not invested in a startup in India.

Microsoft Ventures, which owns and operates six accelerators across the globe, including Beijing, London, Paris, Tel Aviv and Berlin, has so far, invested in 10 startups around the globe through its seed fund.

In an earlier conversation with ET, Mukund Mohan, director, Microsoft Ventures, had said that the accelerator would look to make between three and five investments in early-stage ventures by the end of its financial year ending June 30, 2014.

“Typically, we’ll invest in a company that has some revenue,” Mohan had said.

NowFloats received a first round of funding last August from angel investor network Mumbai Angels and seed-to-early stage venture capital firm Blume Ventures.

source: http://www.articles.economictimes.com / The Economic Times / Home> Industry> Banking & Finance> Finance / by Biswarup Gooptu, ET Bureau / June 18th, 2014

Dr. G M Irfan bags Rashtra Gaurav Award and Gold Medal

DrIrfanMPOs19jun2014
Hyderabad :

Managing Director Bakoban Hospital, Chandrayangutta, Mr. Abdur Rahman Bakoban congratulated Dr. G M Irfan specialist in General and laparoscopic pediatric surgery, on bagging internationally acclaimed Rashtra Gaurav Award and expressed his good wishes. Mr. Bakoban declared that Dr. Irfan has brought laurels to Hyderabad city. The award and certificate of excellence was presented to Dr. Irfan in a function held on June 12 in New Delhi.

The award was given by India International Friendship Society, a top listed voluntary organization which has completed 10 years of its social and economical services on national and international level.

Siasat news

source: http://www.siasat.com / The Siasat Daily / Home> Hyderabad / Thursday – June 19th, 2014

125 years of Salar Jung museum

Salar Jung Museum turns 125. / Photo: K. Ramesh Babu / The Hindu
Salar Jung Museum turns 125. / Photo: K. Ramesh Babu / The Hindu

Hyderabadis pick their favourite exhibits at the museum and suggest improvements, including a better display and a good cafeteria.

A visit to a reputed museum would entail spending a few hours observing collections displayed across spacious galleries, getting insights into the history of the land, partaking in an ongoing event at the premises and topping it off with a fresh brew and short eats at the cafeteria.

A well-informed guide or an audio guide comes in handy for visitors who do not want to pause and read notes along the museum. While this would be possible in leading museums across the world, how many museums within India can boast of giving such an experience? As Hyderabad’s Salar Jung museum celebrates 125 years this weekend, MetroPlus attempts to gauge the merits of the museum and possible areas of improvement through a few of its visitors.

A 19th century sculpture from France, a double statue of Mephistopheles and Margaretta, made of a single block of wood is one of the attractions at the Salarjung Museum. / Photo: K. Ramesh Babu / The Hindu
A 19th century sculpture from France, a double statue of Mephistopheles and Margaretta, made of a single block of wood is one of the attractions at the Salarjung Museum. / Photo: K. Ramesh Babu / The Hindu

National treasure

“The Salar Jung museum is a national treasure and is one of the better maintained museums in the country. A hurried visit might take a few hours but someone who keenly observes the exhibits is bound to take two days,” says filmmaker Indraganti Mohanakrishna who last visited the museum a year ago with his daughter. “It’s a great place where children don’t need to be engaged with gadgets. I liked revisiting the statues, the musical clock, arms and ammunitions gallery and was glad my daughter liked the Veiled Rebecca the most, which is my personal favourite too,” he adds.

Children taking photographs of the musical alram clock at the museum. / Photo: K. Ramesh Babu / The Hindu
Children taking photographs of the musical alram clock at the museum. / Photo: K. Ramesh Babu / The Hindu

Art curator and gallery owner Avani Rao Gandra, like many Hyderabadis, visits the museum accompanying guests. She appreciates the collections that showcase India, the Middle East and Far East. “I once spent a day at the museum researching miniature paintings. Apart from hosting fantastic collections, the museum organises travelling exhibitions of interest,” she notes. While Avani feels the museum has an advantage because of its autonomy, she feels there is scope for improvement. “A month ago, I saw the elevation being spruced up. The display needs to improve as well. A gallery hosting jade collections requires a different design compared to a gallery with textile collections. Art management is significant abroad. Recently, I found a sea change at the National Museum, New Delhi, where art students volunteered as guides and the complex also has a cafeteria. Our museum too needs a good cafeteria apart from a better souvenir shop to offer a wholesome experience,” she states.

Indraganti agrees, “While visiting museums, quite often we have children or the elderly and a good cafeteria is a necessity,” he says.

French artist Beatrice de Fays rates the miniature paintings as her favourite for their precision. “I can spend hours there,” she says, also marvelling at the Veiled Rebecca.

The Veiled Rebecca, a white marble statue by Italian sculptor Giovanni Maria Benzoni. / Photo: K. Ramesh Babu / The Hindu
The Veiled Rebecca, a white marble statue by Italian sculptor Giovanni Maria Benzoni. / Photo: K. Ramesh Babu / The Hindu

The well-travelled draw comparisons between museums abroad and in India, underlining the need for museums here to evolve. Ajay Gandhi of Manthan treasures the memories of visiting the Salar Jung museum on many occasions and talks about the sculptures, costumes, crockery and cutlery of the Nizam era, arms and ammunition, but feels the museum needs something more to engage visitors. “The archaeological museum at Acropolis, Greece, for instance, had recreated an entire excavated city at its basement. We need something more, besides the exhibits,” he says.

Visitors at the museum. / Photo: K. Ramesh Babu / The Hindu
Visitors at the museum. / Photo: K. Ramesh Babu / The Hindu

Inclusive space

The Salar Jung Museum scores with its accessibility to people from different walks of life. Museologist Anita Shah who has researched extensively on how people react to museums, has in the past given several professional recommendations to make the museum a more inclusive public space. “Several recommendations were implemented. I had suggested organising events to bring in different communities and allowing them to exhibit their art,” she says. Anita lauds the ivory collections, miniature paintings, manuscripts, textile gallery, artillery gallery and the jade gallery and hopes to see the museum grow stronger.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> MetroPlus> Society / by Sangeetha Devi Dundoo / Hyderabad – June 19th, 2014

A long wait for the last two autographs to complete Sachin’s sketch

VenkateshTELAN19jun2014

In the last three years, Venkatesh Kandunoori and his friends have travelled to eight States with his large sketch of cricketer Sachin Tendulkar and collected 98 autographs of national and international personalities on it. All that’s left are autographs of Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Congress president Sonia Gandhi. After getting these, Venkatesh plans to present the painting to President Pranab Mukherjee.

However, after spending forty days in the Capital, Venkatesh has still not got an appointment with either leader. While Mr. Modi is expected to return from Bhutan by Tuesday, Ms. Gandhi is leaving for the United States for medical treatment and will only return after three weeks.

“I started on this sketch just before the cricket World Cup in 2011. It took me six months to complete it. In the last three years, I have spent Rs. 5 lakh travelling and approaching renowned persons to sign my painting. I financed this by selling other works of mine,” Venkatesh told The Hindu .

The four-and-a-half foot portrait of the legend is surrounded by national symbols and smaller sketches of personalities linked to cricket, Sachin or the nation.

These include former cricket captains Kapil Dev and Sunil Gavaskar, national and spiritual personalities like Mahatma Gandhi, Swami Vivekananda and Sathya Sai Baba, India’s first cricket captain C.K. Nayudu, Sachin’s first coach Ramakant Achrekar, cricketers Don Bradman and Vivian Richards.

It also features the Indian Koh-i-noor Diamond on the British crown.

“This,” according to Venkatesh, “symbolises that even though we don’t have the diamond with us these people are our koh-i-noors.”

Those who autographed this epic painting include President Mukherjee, former President A.P.J. Abdul Kalam, the chief ministers of Andhra Pradesh, Telangana, Tamil Nadu, Maharashtra and Uttar Pradesh, former Delhi CM Arvind Kejriwal, social activist Anna Hazare, musicians Lata Mangeshkar and A.R. Rahman, the 2011 Indian cricket team which includes Sachin himself and film stars such as Amitabh Bachchan, Madhuri Dixit Nene, Hrithik Roshan, Aishwarya Rai.

The person who played the most hard to get so far, was Mr. Kalam. “It took me two years to get his autograph. Finally, I got it during this visit to Delhi… Travelling everywhere by train, I spent sleepless nights protecting the painting. I have done this to attract government and the public to support and fund sports,” explained Venkatesh who is currently put up with friends in Saket.

A student of the Jawaharlal Nehru Architecture and Fine Arts University in Hyderabad, Venkatesh has also created a realist statue of Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel. The foot-tall brass statue, which has ‘UNITY’ embossed on its base in silver, resembles Soviet-style statues with flowing garments and chiselled expressions.

“I have already planned my next work. It will be a timeline of Indian History from 3000 BC. But first, I need these two autographs to complete a century and give it to the President. I have already spent Rs. 60,000 in Delhi. A taxi, to transport this painting to and from various offices, in order to get an appointment with the leaders, costs Rs. 2000 a day. But I won’t give up,” he told The Hindu

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> National> New Delhi / by Phiroze L. Vincent / New Delhi – June 16th, 2014

MLA’s nephew bags rank in civil services

Mushraf Al Farooqi, nephew of YSR Congress MLA of Kadapa S.B. Amzath Basha, excelled in civil services by securing 80th rank.

Son of Assistant Commissioner of Excise, Murtuza Al Farooqi, who is settled in Hyderabad, Mushraf is an engineering graduate from Chennai and took coaching in IAS Academy in New Delhi. He is keen on opting for IAS.

DSP of CID in Tirupati, Yeddula Vijay, 31, who was a student of St. Joseph High School in Kadapa, secured 263rd rank in civil services. Vijay, son of Yeddula Samuel, senior manager in Union Bank of India, Nellore, passed MBBS from Kurnool Medical College.

He was selected in APPSC Group I and served earlier as DSP of Mancherial in Adilabad district.

Kommisetty Muralidhar of Power House Street in Proddatur, who secured the 406th rank in civil services, is an M. Tech. in Computer Science from IIT, Chennai.

Son of Ramprasad, sanitary supervisor in Proddatur municipality, and Gopalamma, a teacher, Muralidhar was selected to IFS in results announced in January this year.