Thursday, September 11, 2014

5 Tech Trends By Aniruddha Nazre

Are these 5 tech trends in programming going to help or hurt the Indian IT Services industry?
  1. Key aspects of software development, e.g. manage, develop, build, test and deploy are undergoing a massive transformation and making development cheaper, faster, and more secure.
    • Cloud-based integrated development environment companies are providing developers with an advantage of writing code in an easier, faster and simpler fashion.
    • The amount of new code written is reduced by more design-driven development, auto code completion, code repositories, code plugins, widgets,  and continuous agile development.
    • Automated test tools and services in the cloud are making it ever easier to test code before deployment.
    • Cloud security and identity services have made it easier for enterprise applications to work on public, private or hybrid cloud environments.
  2. A new class of Reactive Applications is becoming more and more prevalent in both Consumer and Enterprise-facing environments. Reactive Applications are distinguished by having one or more of the following defining traits:
    • Resilient: The ability to recover and repair itself automatically in order to provide seamless business continuity.
    • Interactive: Rich, engaging, single-page user interfaces that provide instant feedback based on user interactions and other stimuli.
    • Scalable: Can scale within and across nodes elastically to provide compute power on-demand when it’s needed.
    • Event-Driven: Enables parallel, asynchronous processing of messages or events with ease.
  3. The integration of applications to external data sources and other applications is becoming ever easier because of open APIs.
  4. The rapid increase in mobile development has impacted the prevalent programming languages. The user base of objective C and Python have grown whereas that for Java and C++ has eroded.
  5. Consumerization of programming with services such as IFTT is reducing the need for specialized skill set. Pre-developed toolkits will enable anyone to be a developer.

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Tuesday, September 2, 2014

Various Patents Of Aniruddha Nazre

List of Aniruddha Nazre Patents


    United States EP0686373
    Issued December1995
    2. Bioabsorbable suture anchor: Orthopaedic Implant with bearing surface
    United States EP0761242
    Issue d August 19, 1996
    3. Adjustable connector for external fixation rods
    United States US5405347
    Issue d April 1995
    4.Surgical parallel drill guide
    United States D354810
    IssuedJanuary 1995
    5.Adjustable connector for external fixation
    United States EP0611007
    Issued August 1994
    6.Adjustable connector for external fixation
    United States EP0717968
    Issued June 1996
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Monday, August 4, 2014

Aniruddha Nazre's Statement on 3DV Systems

 3DV Systems
3DV Systems' breakthrough video imaging technology enables cameras to capture objects in 3D, making virtual reality more real than ever. The company's innovative man-machine interface enables users to control personal space through intuitive body gestures.
Aniruddha Nazre told, "We are in constant search of visionaries who create disruptive technologies to address large unserved market opportunities. 3DV is such an opportunity that we have been excited to invest in – their breakthrough technology can be applied to a broad range of fields, from human-computer interfaces to security to automob".






Monday, July 28, 2014

Adjustable Connector For External Fixation Rods - Patent By Aniruddha Nazre


The adjustable connector for external fixation rods invention provides for the angular and lateral adjustment of a pair of fixator rods in an infinite number of planes. This invention is patented by  Aniruddha Nazre. The angular adjustment member may be rotated about a center axis of the connector such that the connected fixator rods may be angled relative to one another in any plane called for. Similarly, the lateral adjustment may be rotated about the center axis of the connector such that the two fixator rods may be shifted laterally relative to one another in any direction. 

The adjustable connector provides for the adjustment of the fixator rods after the rods have been connected to the bone pins. Therefore, after a surgeon has reduced and stabilized the fracture, minor adjustments can be carried out to fully align the bone fragments without disconnecting the fixator rods or the bone pins. After all, adjustments have been made, a series of locking bolts or pins can be engaged to hold the adjustable connector in a fixed position.


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Thursday, July 24, 2014

Various Publications Of Aniruddha Nazre


Following are the publications of Aniruddha Nazre -
Clinical and Laboratory Performance of Bone Plates, Issue 1217, Edited by J. Paul Harvey, Robert F. Games
Nazre, A and Lin, S STP1217: Theoretical Strength Comparison of Bioabsorbable (PLLA) Plates and Conventional Stainless Steel and Titanium Plates Used in Internal Fracture Fixation.
Pages: Published: Jan 1994
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A computerized technique for analyzing lateral bending behavior of subjects with the normal and impaired lumbar spine.A pilot study.
Jayaraman G, Nazre, A, McCann V, Redford, JB
Spine (Phila PA 1976), 1994 April 1:19(7), Pages 824-32

Joint moments in minor limb length discrepancy: a pilot study.
Goel A, Loudon J, Nazare A, Rondinelli R, Hassanein K. American Journal of Orthopedics (Belle Mead NJ), 1997 Dec: 26(12), Pages 852-6

Thin-film thermoplastic-metal joining process for titanium to poly(etherketoneetherketoneketone)
Karthik Ramani, John Tagle, Aniruddha Nazre, Dale Swarts and Steve Lin Polymer Engineering & Science, Volume 35, Issue 24, pages 1972-78, December 1995




Monday, July 21, 2014

Kleiner Perkins Eyes Indian Cleantech Companies

The world's leading venture capital firm Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers (KPCB), which has invested in Info Edge's Naukri.com and online travel portal Cleartrip.com, is turning its attention to cleantech or Greentech firms (companies in the clean technology sector) by making four to five investments in the sector in the next six months.

The US-headquartered Kleiner Perkins, which tied up with Al Gore's Generation Investment Management (the latter manages $1.5 billion and invests in public companies in sustainable energy businesses) on Monday, is looking at several early and late-stage Indian cleantech companies for possible investment opportunities, said Aniruddha Nazre, partner and Ray Lane, managing partner at Kleiner Perkins, in a conference call with journalists in India.
Kleiner Perkins, one of the oldest and most successful venture capital firms, makes mostly early-stage venture capital investments from its 12th fund of $700 million. About $200 million is earmarked for Greentech investments.
The Greentech sector ranges across eight sub-segments including renewable energy technologies, building efficiency, cleaner fossil energy, sustainable agriculture, and carbon markets.
"There are numerous opportunities in India. We are looking at several of them (Greentech companies for possible investments). A large number of these are later-stage companies," Nazare said. "You can expect five investments in Greentech in the next three to six months."

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Tuesday, July 15, 2014

Cleantech Investment Concept Evolution - Aniruddha Nazre


How has cleantech as an investment concept evolved?

Aniruddha Nazre explained the cleantech investment concept. We really believe that cleantech is the single biggest investment opportunity of the 21st century. As far as the market size is concerned, if you add up the energy and transport sector, that’s $6 trillion worldwide. That is massive; it dwarfs sectors like IT. But that does not mean you will have hundreds of companies with billion-dollar market caps immediately. The risks and hurdles are also big. The biggest hurdle is obviously that you need more capital. There are several factors why I think cleantech is such an interesting investment opportunity. Firstly, there is a consensus in the world that climate change needs to be addressed. The debate may be around what is causing climate change, but everybody agrees that there will be a change, signs are there. Addressing that is a motivating factor which is driving investments into the sector.

The second is the global policy. The tailwinds are very strong towards a carbon pricing system globally. If you look at what happened in Kyoto versus what is likely to happen in Copenhagen, there is far more possibility that something globally is going to get passed that will price carbon. This will be a very positive policy change towards cleantech.
The third is volatile fossil fuel prices. The world had seen oil prices jump to $148-150 per barrel last year, and it was $35 three months ago, and now it has doubled to $70 per barrel. That volatility is something that people have realized we cannot deal with, and we need to have some stability. There are two factors, which are technology-driven, which I think are causing a lot of innovation and investment opportunities in the space. There are advances in material sciences that are enabling innovations of magnitude that would not have been possible 10 years ago, definitely not 20-30 years ago.

The reason I bring this up is because in 1970s too there was a cleantech revolution. Oil prices had peaked at that time, and there was a lot of funding for innovation. But as soon as oil prices came back down, every thing went away. I think that is not the case today, because other factors are there, and innovation capability is far superior. 
Simply speaking if you want to have a photovoltaic cell with high efficiency or a better battery, new materials are enabling it. We are not just constrained with a periodic table, we can engineer new materials.Second, thanks to Moore’s law, the computing capability we have can simulate systems. Giving an example, if you want to build a car or an airplane today, it takes much less time and dollars. You can simulate most of the systems and test them. Earlier you had to build and then test them, which takes a lot more time and money. You can effect changes with much less capital, which also holds true for cleantech innovation.