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development india

Students taking courses on management of research on plum

MR Sathyamurthy, director of the Division of Management, University of Madras, restoration guide for 2005-06 on Shrinivas Sastri, vice-president (human resources) of GRO India Pvt. Ltd, at a function in Chenn ai Thursday. In addition, because of (left to right) David Nallathambi, head (human resources), Alcatel Development India Pvt.Ltd. B. Venkataramana, head (human resources), Reliance information flow Pvt.Ltd. Georgina and Marie, Company Secretary, PHC Manufac tion Ltd - Photo: Vino John

Chennai: recruiters are not likely to be disappointed when they arrive, seek places in the class of 2006, the Department of Management Studies (DOM), University of Madras, in the year.

Students have just their job easier by the release of a code Recruiters Guide to the division of potential student profiles and other information that can be used in the search for a job on.

The brochure, which were collected by students-Run-Voice of Excellence “, a unit of DOM, was Thursday by Dr. MR Sathyamurthy, director of DOM.

The brochure includes students finance, human resources, marketing and control systems and should be considered the reference book for finding a job.

“The booklet contains a database of 150 students in the years 2006. Players placement earlier in the overseas departments have been a huge success, and we have secured 100 seats per cent over the past three years, ‘’said Dr Sathyamurthy.

Companies, students rented in 2005, contain Coca Cola, Satyam Computer, Murugappa group, Icici Bank, Tata Consultancy Services, Berger colors and Ford

Summer placements were made in Kone Cranes, Kotak Mahindra Bank, Ashok Leyland, Indian Airlines, Ranbaxy, Standard Chartered My faith and Management Consultants. More than 30 companies came calling, he added.

The leaders of Reliance Inforstreams Pvt Ltd, PHC Manufacturing Ltd., Alcatel Development India Pvt Ltd and GRO India Pvt Ltd, were also present when the prospectus was published.

IISc workshop on Indian software model.

Bangalore, February 12. To what extent India’s development in the software sector, or are distinguished by traditional models of development? India has jumped in the middle of scenes and leapfrogged directly on the scene, where technological development is the result? And where are we going to adapt the model of the Indian economy neo-classical model, if it works?

These are some questions to be examined, discussed and debated with 35 professors from schools of the economy in the world from March 3-5 at the Indian Institute of Science (IISc).

The USA and India joint workshop with the term “education to the Indian experience of development”, by the Department of Management Studies, IISc and the School of Public Policy, George Mason University, Virginia.

Explaining the end of the year, Professor KB Akhilesh, professor, Department of Management Studies, IISc, said: “We have seen that Japan, Korea, Taiwan, Singapore and Hong Kong and China have recently quite predictable by a number of stages of development.”

The country has made the jump from the first phase of development, ie the production of low value of labor in the fourth stage of the production of high quality and technologically advanced products and services, without a break in the second and third stage, as other countries have done.

“India is successful, it seems that other than the development of these success stories,” he added.

The workshop will focus on the assumption that India is another path to development and a study may be a new economic model.

During the workshop, Mr. Xue Lan, Executive Associate Dean, School of Public Policy and Management, Tsinghua University, Beijing, it is likely that a paper on a comparative study of Indian and Chinese software in the industry.

Professor Gita Surie the Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania spoke of a model for the evolution of development, it is subjects such as the effects in other sectors, the division of labour between different countries, etc.

Professor Kenneth Keniston, director of India WITH Program, Massachusetts Institute of Technology focuses on efforts to develop applications in local languages which meet the needs of most Indians.

Professor Anthony D’Costa, Associate Professor of Comparative International Development and South Asian Studies at the University of Washington, is likely to visit.

It is currently examining the innovative capacity of the Indian software industry and their impact on development in India, which is very relevant to the theme of the workshop, according to Professor Akhilesh

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