Access, bandwidth, and cost would be the ABC of taking information technology to the common man in the country. Experts and IT industry professionals, who shared their wisdom in the seminar `IT for the common man' organised as part of the Bangalore-IT.COM 2000, stressed these three points for taking the country forward through IT-enabled economic growth.The tone for the seminar was set by Charmed Technology co-founder and CEO Alex Lightman who called for getting Internet access to one billion people in India by the next eight years.
"One billion people connected to the Net would make India one of the super powers in IT-enabled services in the world leading to a cascading effect on all walks of life," Mr Lightman said in a presentation called `An Internet Plan for the Common Man' lasting nearly two hours. The challenge before the Indian IT industry is to connect the disconnected people of the country as fast and early as possible, he said.
The country could take rapid strides towards development by providing better Net access which automatically calls for substantial increase in the bandwidth. "The Indian IT industry should also develop more branded products and services to attain a leadership role. Bangalore should be converted into brand-galore," he said. Indian IT industry should further its close co-operation with its US counterparts to achieve better growth, Mr Lightman said.
Presiding over a session on `Impact of IT on sociological development of society', Sudha Murthy, wife of Infosys chairman NR Narayanamurthy, stressed the need to develop local level networks from the village level to district and to the state level. Bangalore Centre For Knowledge Societies founder Aditya Dev Sood called for a social investment model for the development of IT-enabled growth among the masses. "The private sector could play a vital role in the sector, especially in health and education", Mr Sood said.
Copyright © 2000 Indian Express Newspapers (Bombay) Ltd.