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Thursday, 15 Jul 2010
06:00 PM 09:00 PM
Map Computer History Museum   
1401 N. Shoreline Boulevard
Mountain View , CA -94043
UNITED STATES
Video How Indian MIT and IIT Graduates Have Shaped Computer History
Registration Closed

TiE Silicon Valley and the Computer History Museum Invite you to:

Before Bangalore and Silicon Valley: How Indian MIT and IIT Graduates Have Shaped Computing History

In the last fifteen years the very names Bangalore and Silicon Valley have become evocative of the important connections between India and the United States in the global IT industry. Historian Ross Bassett argues that the linkages between the two countries are far older and deeper than is widely known. In the course of his research, he found that Indian graduates of MIT, to a remarkable extent, significantly influenced the creation of modern technological India. In the colonial period, a small group of Indians, including some associated with Gandhi, went to MIT as an anti-colonial act and as a way to develop technological capabilities for India. Indian graduates of MIT played a key role in the founding of the Indian Institutes of Technology (IIT), and in the years after 1947, were central figures in the Indian steel industry, the atomic program, and the space program. The Indian IT industry today is to an astounding degree the product of Indian graduates of MIT. Since 1965, Indian graduates of MIT and graduates of MIT once removed---that is graduates of the IITs---have also played an increasingly important role in American technology and computing.

Bassett's research is based on numerous research trips to India and scores of interviews. For this project he created a database of every Indian graduate of MIT in the 20th century. Bassett has published articles on Indian graduates of MIT and on IIT Kanpur. His work was profiled in the Economic Times of India and he was invited to give to Godrej Lecture in Business History in Mumbai in October, 2009.

CHM's July 15 "In Conversation With" program will feature Dr. Bassett and an IIT graduate, Silicon Valley businessman, and T.M. Ravi (invited), discussing the roots of the Indian IT industry and its influence on the computing history.

Please Note: The Museum is closed all of July in preparation for our major, new exhibition opening in January 2011. We will open doors for this event at 5:45pm. 

 You can watch the video of the event here:

 

  
Keynote Speaker
Ross Bassett, PhD, Associate Professor of History, North Carolina State University 
Moderator
TM Ravi, President & CEO, Mimosa Systems, Inc. 
Patricia   Acosta
408-567-0700 X234
patricia@tie.org
  
07/15/2010 06:00 PM Private Reception (For TiE CM, Members & Sponsor ONLY)
07/15/2010 07:00 PM Program
07/15/2010 09:00 PM Adjourn