Top Technology Innovators in India for 2011, by MIT’s Technology Review
MIT’s Technology Review has announced its India TR35 list for 2011 representing innovators, all under age 35, who exemplify innovation in business and technology. Eighteen young men and women, all under the age of 35 are a part of the list of hottest technology innovators from India. Coming from a wide range of fields these innovators, including two women, are part of the prestigious India TR35 honour by MIT’s Technology Review India.
Here are the details of all the winners.
Technology Review has handpicked three from the Top 18 Indian innovators– Alefia Merchant, Ajit Narayanan and Gautam Kumar – for special honours.
Technology Review India’s ‘Innovator of the Year’, Ajit Narayanan, 29, exemplifies the spirit of innovation in India. Toiling for a few years at a startup, Invention Labs Engineering, incubated at the IIT (Indian Institute of Technology) Madras, Narayanan has developed an alternate communication system for millions of people who remain incommunicado with the society due to their disabilities.Avaz, (voice in Hindi) is the tool which uses a variety of software and hardware to provide a voice to these muted millions using just their muscle movements.
Another celebrated innovator, a young medical student, Alefia Merchant, 32 is pursuing medical studies in Canada. Alefia, during her short stint with Bangalore-based eye hospital, Narayana Nethralaya developed an easy method to spot eye disorders in young children. Millions of Indian children from poor families do not have access to cost-effective diagnostic tools to detect their vision threatening conditions before the age of five.
Merchant used the images from digital cameras to look for vision threatening symptoms. The simplicity of the method provides a handy tool in the hands of health workers in remote corners of India and perhaps many other medically underserved regions in the world. For this amazing invention the jury named Alefia Merchant, the Humanitarian of the Year, from the perspective of technology innovation.
Gautam Kumar, 26, from Bhubaneswar was named as the Social Innovator of the year. Most urban homes in India use liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) supplied in cylinders for cooking. Leakages from the cylinder are common and thousands of people die every year due to cylinder blasts caused by leakages in kitchens.
Kumar has developed a simple gas detection system using a sensor and communication module to issue warning to user’s registered mobile phone. Called Suraksha (safety in Hindi), it is another innovation that should improve safety levels in millions of Indian homes in the coming years.
India TR35 list presented in the March 2011 issue of Technology Review India recognizes the game-changing achievements of young inventors from diverse areas covering biotechnology and medicine, nanotechnology and materials, computer & electronics hardware, energy, Internet and web and software.
The 2011 India TR 35 list includes
For Biotechnology & Medicine
Alefia Merchant, University of Montreal, Montreal named as Humanitarian of the Year for developing a novel way of screening children as part of community pediatric ophthalmology project at Narayana Nethralaya
Sameer Jain, MGV Dental College, Nashik for creating an innovative root canal machine
For Computer & Electronics Hardware
Ajit Narayanan, Invention Labs Engineering, Chennai named Innovator of the Year for creating Voice device for people with speech disabilities
Aishwarya Lakshmi Ratan, Microsoft Research, Bangalore for creating a hybrid paper, pen, and digital slate solution for a low-cost digital record management system by
Fahad Azad, Robosoft Systems, Mumbai for bridling a duct cleaning robot to improve quality of the air we breathe
Gautam Kumar, RoboticWares, Bhubaneswar named Social Innovator of the year for developing system to detect gas leakages
Pulkit Gaur, Gridbots, Ahmedabad for inventing underwater robot to clean tanks and reduce water wastage
Srinivasan Jayaraman, Tata Consultancy Services, Bangalore for devising a secure system using human ECG to authenticate, identify and diagnose
For Energy
Harit Soni, Ecolibrium Energy, Ahmedabad for creating smart grid technology to optimize the use of electricity in India
Sanjoy Ghosh, Logica India, Bangalore for building a device that wirelessly monitors and reports vehicular emission in real-time
For Internet & Web
Manav Bhatia, Alcatel-Lucent, Bangalore for securing the Internet service provider’s routing network
Sushant Sinha, Indian Kanoon, Bangalore for developing a search engine for Indian laws and court judgments
For Nanotechnology & Materials
Krishna Gopal Singh, EnNatura Technology Ventures, Delhi for creating ecofriendly printing ink that reduces harmful emissions by almost 99 percent
Mayur M. Sadawana, Indian Institute of Technology, Mumbai for inventing point-of-care multi-analyte sensor
For Software
Akash Lal, Microsoft Research, Bangalore for improving software quality using automated verification
Akshay Shah, iWeb Technology Solutions, Mumbai for creating a business process management generator which can create applications on the fly
For Telecommunications
Deepak Ravindran, Innoz Technologies, Gurgaon for creating a mobile based search engine to deliver information on any topic
Sagar Bedmutha, Optinno Mobitech, Pune for developing an intelligent anti-spamming software for mobile phones
Technology Review India Editor Ch. Srinivas Rao who led the project says each of the shortlisted 60 entries from nearly 200 odd entries was evaluated by at least three jury members. “It is heartening to see an increase in technology innovation in India”
The 2011 class of India TR35 winners have all demonstrated either development of new technology or the creative application of existing technologies to solve problems from the shores of India.
Technology Review India has followed the same elaborate process that its Cambridge, USA based parent adopts in the selection of its winners in the US. Technology Review’s deputy editor Brian Bergstein who has been one of the key members to evaluate the global TR 35 program, went beyond his brief to evaluate all the shortlisted entries.
This is a direct reproduction of an article from Pluggd.in