Message for the day…” No One is Outside the Love of God…”

Sathya Sai Baba

No one is outside the Love of the Lord. The eighteen-year old boy is asked by the mother to go into the kitchen, take a plate and serve himself rice and curry and eat. The mother is not callous or unkind; she knows the capacity of the boy and treats him as he ought to be treated. For another son she accompanies to the kitchen, sits by his side and serves food to him. But she seats the third son on her lap and feeds with many a song in order to make the process pleasant for the child. Do not think that the mother is partial; no, she is only making use of her knowledge of the capacity of her children to make them progress. That is the nature of maternal love.

Sundar Pichai and the world of Indian CEOs….

File picture taken on July 24, 2013 shows Sundar Pichai, Senior Vice President of Android, Chrome and Apps for Google, speaking at a media event at Dogpatch Studios in San Francisco, California

It is not every day that one of the world’s largest technology companies announces a new CEO.

So when Google announced that Sundar Pichai was taking the reins on Monday, his promotion gained thousands of column inches worldwide – not least of all in his native India. The Hindu newspaper called the news “a bonus for people of Indian-origin world over“. The Times of India hailed the “quiet yet thoughtful” man from Chennai (Madras). But his ascent is far from unique. In fact, it is becoming ever more common for major international companies to have an Indian-born CEO. One study, by the University of Southern New Hampshire, says that Indian managers are more successful because of “a paradoxical blend of genuine personal humility and intense professional will”. Whatever the model is, it seems to be working. Mr Pichai is the latest, and the most high-profile, Indian-born CEO. You can read more about him here – but here are five more Indian-born CEOs who are making waves.

Satya Nadella – Microsoft

Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella addresses delegates during the launch of the Windows 10 operating system in Kenya Mr Nadella, 47, who was named the head of Microsoft in February last year, was one of the first to tweet his congratulations to Mr Pichai on Monday. On his first day in the job, the father-of-three sent an email to all staff, calling it “a very humbling day for me“. “I am… defined by my curiosity and thirst for learning,” he told staff. “I buy more books than I can finish. I sign up for more online courses than I can complete. “I fundamentally believe that if you are not learning new things, you stop doing great and useful things.” Born in Hyderabad, he joined the company in 1992 and was previously in charge of Microsoft’s Cloud OS service, which powers products such as Bing, Skype and Xbox Live. Microsoft’s man at the top

Ajay Banga – Mastercard

Mastercard CEO Ajay Banga speaks to reporters on the sidelines of the White House Summit on Cybersecurity and Consumer Protection at Stanford University in Palo Alto, California, on February 13, 2015 After working for Nestle, then PepsiCo, Mr Banga – who is from Pune – took over as CEO of the credit card company in July 2010. He began his career with Nestle in 1981. In a speech in April to his alma mater, the Indian Institute of Management (IIM), he outlined what he called the “grand plan” he had at the start of his career. “Get with somebody good. Get with somebody global. Do something that interested me. That’s it. So, don’t stress if you haven’t got a detailed plan for your life. Anyone can have a good idea or plan; what makes it great is execution.” He also outlined six main lessons for good leadership:

  • a sense of urgency
  • a sense of balance
  • the courage to take thoughtful risks
  • be competitively paranoid
  • develop a global view
  • do well and do good

Indira Nooyi – PepsiCo

CEO of PepsiCo Indra Nooyi speaks at the official opening of a PepsiCo bottling plant not far from Moscow in Domodedovo on July 8, 2009 Named the third most powerful woman in business by Fortune magazine last year, Ms Nooyi was, like Sundar Pichai, born in Chennai. She was named CEO of PepsiCo in 2006, having joined the company in 1994. The company she presides over is a food and drinks giant: some of the brands owned by PepsiCo include Starbucks, Muller, Frito-Lay and Tropicana. The company says 22 of its brands are each worth more than $1bn (£640m). “In my case, I benefited because I grew up outside of the United States,” Ms Nooyi said in an interview in March. “I understand exactly how the world works, and I could see the world through the eyes of people from outside the United States.”

Ivan Menezes – Diageo

An undated image of Ivan Menezes, Chief Executive of Diageo plc.

Mr Menezes, from Pune, is another IIM graduate. He took over as head of the British drinks giant Diageo in July 2013. Like Ajay Banga, he began his career with Nestle in 1981. Among the brands the company owns are Guinness, Johnnie Walker whisky, Smirnoff vodka and Captain Morgan rum. One of his biggest moves as CEO was to buy a majority stake in India’s United Spirits company, though that deal has since provided Diageo with a number of headaches.

Shantanu Narayen – Adobe Systems

Adobe CEO Shantanu Narayen speaks during a keynote address by Samsung President and General Manager of Visual Display Business Boo-Keun Yoon at the 2011 International Consumer Electronics Show at the Las Vegas Hilton January 6, 2011 Mr Narayen, from Hyderabad, has run the software firm since December 2007. He began his career with Apple. “There’s an Indian community that’s vibrant and thriving,” he said of Silicon Valley in an interview in February. “We attribute a lot of that to the importance of education that we all grew up with.” In the interview, he said Hyderabad’s schools – modelled on the British public school system – helped his progression, as did having a foreigner’s appreciation of the opportunity the US had given him. Source…www.bbc.com Natarajan

” சுந்தர் பிச்சை: இணைய சாம்ராஜ்யத்தின் தமிழ்ப் புயல்…”

சுந்தர் பிச்சை | கோப்புப் படம்: கமல் நரங்

சுந்தர் பிச்சை | கோப்புப் படம்: கமல் நரங்

இது கூடத் தெரியாதா உனக்கு? போய் கூகுள் பண்ணுப்பா’ என்று அறிவுறுத்துகிற புதிய வழக்கு உருவாகிவிட்டது. தேடுதல் என்ற வார்த்தைக்குச் சமமாக இன்று கூகுள் என்ற இணையத் தேடுபொறி மாறிவிட்டது. 2006-ம் ஆண்டு ஆக்ஸ்போர்டு டிக்ஷனரியிலும் அந்தச் சொல் சேர்ந்துவிட்டது.

கூகுள் சாம்ராஜ்யம்

எந்த ஒரு விசயத்தைப் பற்றி நாம் கேட்டாலும் அதனை கோடிக்கணக்கான இணையதளங்கள் செயல்படுகிற கணினிகளில் இருந்து தேடி எடுக்கிறது கூகுள். நல்லது, கெட்டது, சரி, தவறு எல்லாவற்றையும் நம்முன் படைக்கிறது. அதிலிருந்து அன்னப்பறவை போல உங்களுக்கு தேவையானதை எடுத்துக்கொள்ள வேண்டும்.

இன்றைய இணைய உலகில் கூகுள் ஓர் அசைக்க முடியாத நிறுவனமாக மாறிவிட்டது. உலகம் முழுவதும் பத்து லட்சத்துக்கும் அதிகமான ஆதார தகவல் மையங்களை அது வைத்துள்ளது. அமெரிக்காவை மையமாகக் கொண்டு உலகின் பல நாடுகளில் கூகுள் செயல்படுகிறது. 52 ஆயிரம் பேருக்கும் மேலாக தற்போது இந்த கம்பெனியில் பணியாற்றுகின்றனர்.

அத்தகையப் பெரும் இணைய சாம்ராஜ்யத்தின் தலைமை செயல் அதிகாரி (சி.இ.ஓ) ஆக தமிழகத்தைச் சேர்ந்த சுந்தர் பிச்சை நியமிக்கப்பட்டுள்ளார். ‘ஆண்ட்ராய்ட் ஒன்’ என்பதைப் புதிதாக கூகுள் அறிவித்தபோது அவர் பிரபலமடைந்தார்.

ஆலமரமாய்…

சுந்தர் பிச்சை 2004-ம் ஆண்டு கூகுளில் இணைந்துள்ளார். 2011- ல் கூகுள் குரோம் ப்ரவுசர், ஜிமெயில், ஆப்ஸ் உள்ளிட்ட பிரிவுகளுக்கான உலகளாவிய பொறுப்பாளராக அவர் நியமிக்கப்பட்டார். 2013 முதல் ஆண்ட்ராய்ட் மென்பொருளுக்கான பொறுப்பாளராகவும் அவர் நியமிக்கப்பட்டுள்ளார்.

1998-ல் லாரி பேஜ் மற்றும் சேர்ஜி பிரின் எனும் இரண்டு நண்பர்களால் இந்த கூகுள் நிறுவனம் தொடங்கப்பட்டது. உலகிலுள்ள தகவல்களை ஒருங்கிணைப்பதே கூகுளின் நோக்கமாகும்.

ஒரு நாளில் 100 கோடிக்கும் மேலான தகவல்கள் கூகுளில் தேடப்படுகின்றன. அதி விரைவாக கூகுள் வளர்ச்சியடைந்துள்ளது. பல புதிய மென்பொருள் சேவைகளும் அதனால் வெளியிடப்பட்டுள்ளன.

ஜிமெயில் எனப்படும் கூகுள் மெயில், கூகுள் டாக்குமெண்டுகள், கூகுள் பிளஸ், கூகுள் டாக், கூகுள் மேப்ஸ், கூகுள் நியூஸ், பிளாக்கர், யூ ட்யூப் போன்ற பல்வேறு கிளைகளை பரப்பி பிரம்மாண்டமான ஆலமரமாய் அது வளர்ந்துள்ளது.ஆண்டுதோறும் லட்சக்கணக்கான கோடிகள் ரூபாய் மதிப்பில் அதன் வியாபாரம் விரிந்துள்ளது.

விரியும் ஆதிக்கம்

சமீபத்தில் குரோம் ப்ரவுசர் என்னும் இணைய உலவியையும் கூகுள் வெளியிட்டது. அது தற்போது இணைய ப்ரவுசர்களின் மார்க்கெட்டில் 32 சதவீதத்தை கைப்பற்றி உள்ளது. ஆண்ட்ராய்டு என்னும் செல்போனை இயக்கும் மென்பொருள்தளத்தையும் அது வெளியிட்டது. அதனால் செல்போன்களின் துறையில் பெரும்தாக்கம் ஏற்பட்டுள்ளது.

உங்கள் கைகளில் விளையாடும் டச் ஸ்கிரீன் செல்போன்களில் ஏற்பட்டுள்ள புதுமைகளுக்கு எல்லாம் ஆண்ட்ராய்ட் இயங்குதளம் எனும் மென்பொருளும் ஒரு காரணம். தற்போது செல்போன் உள்ளிட்ட 120 கோடி கருவிகளில் ஆண்ட்ராய்ட் மென்பொருள் பயன்படுகிறது.

சென்னையின் புதல்வர்

சுந்தர் பிச்சை சென்னையில் பிறந்தவர். மேல்படிப்புக்காக மேற்குவங்கத்தை சேர்ந்த கரக்பூரில் உள்ள ஐஐடியில் சேர்ந்து படித்தவர். அமெரிக்காவின் ஸ்டான்ஃபோர்டு பல்கலைக்கழகத்தில் எம்.எஸ் பட்டமும், பென்சில்வேனியாவில் இருக்கும் வார்டன் கல்லூரியில் எம்.பி.ஏ. பட்டமும் பெற்றவர். கூகுள் நிறுவனத்தில் சேருவதற்கு முன்பு மெக்கென்சி நிறுவனத்தின் சாஃப்ட்வேர் நிறுவனங்களுக்கு கன்சல்டன்டாக இருந்திருக்கிறார்.

சுந்தர் பிச்சையைப் பற்றி கூகுளின் இணை நிறுவனரான லாரி பேஜ் “அவர் ஆழமான தொழில்நுட்ப அனுபவம், உற்பத்தி மீதான சிறப்பான கண்காணிப்பு, தொழில் முனைப்புத் திறமை ஆகியவற்றின் அரிய ஒருங்கிணைப்பாக இருக்கிறார்” எனப் பாராட்டுகிறார்.

சுந்தர் பிச்சையின் அப்பா சென்னையில் உள்ள பிரிட்டிஷ் பன்னாட்டு கம்பெனியான ஜிஇசியில் எலக்ட்ரிகல் இன்ஜினீயராக இருந்துள்ளார். சுந்தர் பிச்சைக்கு 12 வயதில் ஒரு மகள் இருக்கிறார்.

அடுத்த பாய்ச்சல்

கூகுள் நிறுவனம் ஆண்ட்ராய்ட் மென்பொருள் மூலம் தனது அடுத்த தயாரிப்புகளைத் திட்டமிட்டு செயல்படுத்தி வருகிறது. இவை போன்ற தயாரிப்புகள் எல்லாம் மனித வாழ்வில் பெரிய தாக்கத்தை ஏற்படுத்த உள்ளன. இத்தகைய திட்டங்களில் முக்கிய பங்காற்றுபவராக சுந்தர் பிச்சை இருக்கிறார்.

ஆண்ட்ராய்ட் ஜீனியஸ் என அழைக்கப்படும் சுந்தர் பிச்சை இப்போது சி.இ.ஓ.வாக நியமிக்கப்பட்ட நிலையில், கூகுளின் அடுத்த பாய்ச்சல் நிச்சயம் மகத்தானதாக இருக்கும் என்ற எதிர்பார்ப்பு கூடியிருக்கிறது.

Source….த.நீதிராஜன்  in http://www.tamil .thehindu.com

Natarajan

” The Rise and Rise of Sundar Pichai….”

Pichai Sundararajan aka Sundar Pichai. Photo: Kamal Narang

Pichai Sundararajan aka Sundar Pichai. Photo: Kamal Narang   The Hindu

“Super excited about his progress and dedication to the company,” says Google co-founder Larry Page.

Google’s announcement on Monday that it would be subsumed within a new parent company called Alphabet had a bonus for people of Indian-origin world over: the company’s head of Products and Engineering, Chennai-born Pichai Sundararajan, was anointed the CEO of the new, “slimmed down” Google.

Underscoring his confidence in the man known as Sundar Pichai (43), Google boss Larry Page said of the restructuring in the company he co-founded with Sergey Brin, “A key part of this is Sundar Pichai.”

Mr. Pichai, who is a graduate of IIT Kharagpur and Stanford University, had “really stepped up since October of last year, when he took on product and engineering responsibility for our Internet businesses,” Mr. Page said in a blog post, adding that he and Mr. Brin were “super excited about his progress and dedication to the company.”

They may well have reason to feel fortunate that Mr. Pichai is the man to head their $66-billion revenue, $16-billion profit, company– by most accounts he combines a deep passion for engineering excellence with a rare managerial quality of attracting the best talent into the teams he works with.

Mr. Pichai started at Google in 2004, where he was known as a “low-key manager” who worked on the Google toolbar and then led the launch of the market-beating Chrome browser in 2008.

Following this his rise through the ranks of Google took on an increasingly meteoric tenor, and soon he became Vice President, then Senior Vice President, and ultimately was charged with supervising all Google apps including Gmail and Google Drive and finally given control of Android itself.

His promotion to Product Chief in October 2014 literally made him Mr. Page’s second-in-command with oversight of day-to-day operations for all of Google’s major products including maps, search, and advertising.

Some of Mr. Pichai’s colleagues describe him in the media as a skilled diplomat, including Caesar Sengupta, a Google Vice President who has worked with Mr. Pichai for eight years, and said to Bloomberg News, “I would challenge you to find anyone at Google who doesn’t like Sundar or who thinks Sundar is a jerk.”

Nowhere was Mr. Pichai’s easy blending of techno-diplomatic competence evident than in early 2014, when the fracas between Samsung and Google was reaching fever pitch, at the time over Samsung’s Magazine UX interface for its tablets, which Google felt may have been deliberately underselling Google services such as its Play apps store.

According to reports “Defusing the situation fell to Sundar Pichai, the tactful, tactical new chief of Google’s Android division. Pichai set up a series of meetings with J.K. Shin, CEO of Samsung Mobile Communications, [where] they held ‘frank conversations’ about the companies’ intertwined fates [and a] fragile peace was forged.”

Since then, Samsung has apparently agreed to scale back Magazine UX, and the two corporations have announced a broad patent cross-licensing arrangement to implement which they “now work together more closely on user experience than we ever have before,” according to Mr. Pichai.

Another apparent talent of Google’s new CEO – his thinking seems to be ahead of the curve. Although Mr. Pichai trained in metallurgy and materials science at IIT Kharagpur, and Stanford and did an MBA at Wharton, he was already deeply immersed in the world of electronics.

According to one of his college professors Mr. Pichai “was doing work in the field of electronics at a time when no separate course on electronics existed in our curriculum.”

The Google founders no doubt recognised that Mr. Pichai was a man on an evangelical-type mission for pushing the boundaries of technology.

Mr. Pichai most eloquently outlined this mission when he said, “For me, it matters that we drive technology as an equalising force, as an enabler for everyone around the world. Which is why I do want Google to see, push, and invest more in making sure computing is more accessible, connectivity is more accessible.”

Prime Minister Narendra Modi also congratulated Mr. Pichai on his appointment as Google CEO.

Source….Narayan Lakshman in http://www.the hindu.com

Natarajan

A Mini Punjab in Tamilnadu….

Workers from Punjab at Akal farm in Vallanthai village. Photo: S. James

Workers from Punjab at Akal farm in Vallanthai village. Photo: S. James..The Hindu

Hard working farmers from Punjab are greening dry tracts in the interiors of Ramnad district.

Ropar in Punjab or Ramnad in Tamil Nadu, it no longer makes a difference to Jaspal, Harpal, Gagandeep and Rajendra Singh. Wearing colourful turbans, long white shirts and pyjamas they are out in the fields doing what they love — tilling the land.

“If you love nature and understand the interconnectedness of life, you can do farming anywhere,” says the youngest in the group, Jaspal, in chaste Punjabi.

The sun shines bright in Vallandhai village in Kamuthi taluk of Ramnad district. The farmers, with smiles on their sun-tanned faces, move around pulling out bunches of groundnuts. A lady in salwar-suit walks into the fields with a thermos of chilled lassi (butter milk) and the men take a break.

The group of Punjabis have beautifully blended into the sun-blistered landscape of one of the driest districts in south Tamil Nadu and shown the locals how a farmer’s faith and hard work can yield amazing results.

Till about a decade ago the land here was covered with thorny bushes (kaattu karuvelam) and abandoned by the locals. Today, a big iron gate welcomes you into the area now called the ‘Akal Farm’ that boasts of lush green orchards and sustainable green farms. It has not only become the talking point in the district but also a model example of cultivation showcased to tourists, agriculturists and visitors.

With apt knowledge, experience and some experimentation, about two-dozen farmers from Moga and Sangrur districts in Punjab are now successfully growing mangoes, water melons, papaya, guava, cucumber, pumpkin, amla, carrot, ladies finger, oranges, sapota and custard apple. “We are gradually acquiring more land and increasing our farm produce,” says the soft-spoken Darshan Singh, one of the two group leaders-cum-supervisor who can speak a smattering of Tamil and was invited by the District Collector last month to address local administration staff and farmers from the region.

 

Workers from Punjab at Akal farm in Vallanthai village. Photo: S. James

“It was my first attempt at public speaking and I felt humbled,” says Darshan Singh, “to share tips because I know every farmer anywhere shares a special relationship with the real food.” “I managed to convey my points as I was asked to motivate the people who had rejected the same land for farming,” he adds.

Sab rab di meherbani hain (everything is God’s grace),” says Darshan Singh, who feels the yield is not yet as high as desired. But we all are happy to have turned the infertile and fallow lands into lush green orchards and fields, he adds.

It all began when Darshan Singh and his friend, Manmohan Singh, left behind their families and chose to travel more than 3,000 kms to this backward belt seven years ago. They followed the suggestion of a retired agriculture officer to explore cultivation in the arid lands of south Tamil Nadu.

“We migrated for farming beyond our home State lured by the cheap land that was in short supply back home,” says Sarabjeet Singh, another senior member in the group. “We were discouraged by the locals who were always grudging against the long dry spells. But we did not mind experimenting because the land was being sold at a throwaway price – Rs.10,000 per acre,” he adds.

The friends pooled in money and jointly bought 300 acres. They also took a house on rent in nearby Virudhunagar and travelled everyday to the hamlet. It took three years to clear the land, dig two dozen borewells, instal drip irrigation and make it ready for plantation.

“We toiled round-the-clock as cleaners, gardeners, farmers, night guards…initially the locals were hostile to us,” says Darshan Singh, “but everybody’s hard work and patience is bearing fruits now.”

“The results took time but we did not lose hope,” asserts Sarabjeet Singh.

Life has taken a new turn inside this mini-Punjab in Vallandhai. The Akal farm now encompasses 600 acres and also has a neatly fenced campus with small cottages, dormitory, a common kitchen, dining area and meditation room. “We no longer feel we live outside Punjab,” says Darshan Singh.

The farmers and their families celebrate Lohri, holi, baisakhi, rakhi, teej and diwali. The women cook the daily dal-chawal and roti-subzi together and even feed the visitors. They also join in pongal and Tamil new year celebrations with their local friends. “The villagers have become friendly now,” says Darshan Singh.

In fact with the Punjabi farmers setting a trend, some local farmers have joined them as workers in the Akal Farm. Some have even returned to them offering to buy the green fields at a higher rate.

A retired Village Administration Officer, Syed Segana, has been with them for the past six years helping in administrative work and translations. “I am trying to teach them Tamil,” he smiles, “but our friendship is beyond language, food and boundaries now.” “Nature and greenery binds us together and it does not matter where we belong to and where we stay and work,” he adds.

Workers from Punjab at Akal farm in Vallanthai village. Photo: S. James

The Akal Farm yields

Amla and guava on 40 acres each, mixed dry fruits like cashew nuts and almonds on five acres, papaya on 10 acres. The farmers have planted 5,000 mango trees on 80 acres besides coconut and timber-value trees on 10 acres each and an assortment of other fruits and vegetables. They also cultivate inter-crop and this season harvested 15 tonnes of pumpkin, five tonnes of cucumber and 20 tonnes of water melon on a daily basis.

Source…..Soma Basu in http://www.thehindu.com

Natarajan

 

“Sundar Pichai: Google’s new boss from humble roots…..”…. A Report From BBC

With Google creating its own parent company, Alphabet, there’s a bit of moving about in the Google boardroom.

Larry Page is now chief executive of Alphabet. Sergey Brin is its president.

And moving up to be in charge of Google is 43-year-old Sundar Pichai.

Sundar Pichai

Great news for Pichai, and good news too for India – his appointment makes him the latest Indian to earn a massively high-profile job in the US technology industry. Microsoft’s Satya Nadella is the other notable example.

Pichai’s life story is remarkable, and his rise to the top of Google is a glowing endorsement of India’s standing in the global technology industry, and equally, a reassuring reminder of the so-called “American Dream”.

Pichai was born and schooled in Chennai, India. He captained his school’s cricket team, leading it to win regional competitions.

He studied Metallurgical Engineering at the Indian Institute of Technology in Kharagpur (IIT Kharagpur). According to one of his tutors, quoted in the Times of India, Pichai was the “brightest of his batch”.

He has evidently used his talent to great effect at Google, a company he joined in 2004. Products under his watch include Google’s web browser, Chrome, as well as the Android mobile operating system.

Android is by far the world’s most popular mobile OS – a fact made perhaps more startling by the fact Pichai’s family did not possess a telephone until he was 12 years old.

Challenges

According to a profile in Bloomberg magazine, Pichai’s upbringing was humble. His family lived in a two room apartment. Pichai didn’t have a room – he slept on the living room floor, as did his younger brother.

The family didn’t own a television, or a car.

But Pichai’s father planted the seeds of technology into his boy’s mind, partly thanks to his job at British conglomerate General Electric Company (not to be confused with the American General Electric).

“I used to come home and talk to him a lot about my work day and the challenges I faced,” Regunatha Pichai told Bloomberg, adding that Sundar had a remarkable talent for remembering telephone numbers.

After graduating from IIT Kharagpur, Pichai was offered a scholarship at the ultimate breeding ground of tech geniuses – Stanford. The plane ticket to America cost more than his Dad’s annual salary.

At Google, Pichai is described as soft-spoken, and well liked. He is also very popular among developers – he runs Google’s annual developer event, I/O.

“Sundar has been saying the things I would have said (and sometimes better!) for quite some time now, and I’ve been tremendously enjoying our work together,” wrote Larry Page in his blogpost announcing all the big changes.

Larry Page and Sergey Brin have been hands-off with Google’s day-to-day running for sometime, and so, in Pichai’s life, today’s announcement is simply making it official: he’s in charge.

His remit is best summed up as Google’s core products – the bits that make the real money. That includes things like search, advertising, maps and YouTube.

He has challenges to navigate, like YouTube’s increasingly intense battle with Facebook in the video space. The social network has dramatically increased the amount of video being watched on its site – but YouTube still holds the title of most popular, for now at least.

Follow Dave Lee on Twitter @DaveLeeBBC.

Source….Dave Lee in http://www.bbc.com

Natarajan

 

Here are 8 Things You should know about Sundar Pichai….New CEO of Google…

Sundar Pichai: Here are 8 things you should know about the new Google CEO

Sundar Pichai talking about Android at the conference. Reuters

We saw this coming, didn’t we? A major shake-up at Google last year had put Sundar Pichai at the fore-front and in-charge of all products, except YouTube that was headed by CEO Susan Wojcicki.

Over the years, India-born Sundar Pichai has slowly yet steadily become a fore-runner at Google. After a leap from heading Chrome to in-charge of the core Google products including  Google Research, Google+, Google Maps, search, ads and more, he is now set to become the Google CEO. Over the last one year, he has been on stage demonstrating most Google products including the Android Pay lately.

In a surprise move, Google announced on Monday the launch of Alphabet Inc as its parent company with co-founders Larry Page as its CEO and Sergey Brin as president. This has paved way for Pichai to become the next CEO of Google, which will be the new entity’s largest fully owned subsidiary, a trimmed version of what it is known now. The new structure, which will take shape over the next few months, was announced by Page in a blogpost and in a filing to the Security and Exchange Commission.

Google’s main business will include search, ads, maps, apps, YouTube and Android and all related technical infrastructure.

“Alphabet is mostly a collection of companies,” Page said in the post, adding: “Our model is to have a strong CEO who runs each business, with Sergey and me in service to them as needed.”

43-year old Pichai Sundararajan, popular as Sundar Pichai joined Google in 2004. We’ve encompassed this decade of his journey and rise to fame in our timeline below:

Education and background
Pichai was born in Chennai, India and completed his schooling from Padma Seshadri Bala Bhavan. He later earned the Bachelors of Technology (BTech) degree from IIT- Kharagpur, and further went in for an MS from Stanford University. He also holds an MBA degree from University of Pennsylvania.

Before joining Google
Sundar Pichai has earlier worked for McKinsey & Company in management consulting. He has also worked in engineering and product management at Applied Materials.

Google and pre-Chrome era
Pichai joined Google in 2004  and is known to have worked on popular products like Toolbar, and also others like Google Gears and Google Pack, before Chrome was launched. However, it was the success of the Toolbar that helped Pichai pace through his career as Google noticed that it was significantly increasing the number of  user searches. This eventually made Google believe that it should have its own browser.

Rise of Chrome and Pichai
At Google, Pichai is popular for having led product management and innovation of Google’s client software products such as Google Chrome and Chrome OS. Pichai is believed to be the man responsible for driving Google’s Chrome OS and browser forward. In 2008, he was appointed as VP of product development and introduced Chrome browser. It was soon followed by Chrome OS in 2009. It was from 2008 that people started seeing more of Pichai at Google presentations and he soon became a known Google face. By 2012, he was the Senior VP of Chrome and apps.

Appointed as Android chief
Though Pichai had spent almost a decade at Google, it was only in 2013 that he became a well known figure worldwide after stepping into the shoes of Andy Rubin. Interestingly, Pichai joined Google in the same year that Rubin brought Android to Google via acquisition. Though Rubin helped develop Android to a great extent for almost a decade, Larry Page soon felt that Pichai would help give it a further push.

Ties with Samsung and Android One
Sundar Pichai is believed to be the man responsible for keeping smooth ties with partners like Samsung. He recently also launched the Android One initiative in India by teaming up with local manufacturers like Micromax, Spice and Karbonn.

CEO candidate at Microsoft
He was also rumoured to be one of the key candidates being considered for top position at Microsoft, which later went to India-born Satya Nadella.

 

Products head
Last year, Larry Page promoted Pichai to oversee core products including search, maps, Google+, commerce, advertising and infrastructure and more. This means, the heads of these departments will now report to Pichai. This puts Pichai at a very key position at Google, as the company’s main services such as search and advertising units help generate major chunk of the revenue.

 

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Source…..www.rech.firstpost.com

Natarajan

Message for the Day…” Suffer loss and grief gladly, for they help to toughen your personality…”

Sathya Sai Baba

Never yield to indolence or despair. Suffer loss and grief gladly, for they help to toughen your personality. The diamond is found amidst rocks; you will have to blast through the vein to get gold. Follow the strict regimen that the doctor enforces in order to make the medicine yield the best result. The battery of your ‘car’ is charged when you come to Puttaparthi or when you go to some other holy place. Or at least that should be the aim of the pilgrimage. Charge the battery of your spiritual effort and then, after you return home, do not keep the car idle. If you do, the battery will run down; take the car around and keep it going; then the battery will charge itself. So also, if you do not continue the holy company, the good attitude, bhajans, and remembering God’s Name as part of your life, all this charging will turn into a waste.

Meet Alphabet, Google’s New Corporate Boss As Sundar Pichai Takes Over The Search Company…

Google just rocked the world with some light news on a Monday. It has restructured the company and everything will now report up to “Alphabet Inc.” a new corporate name. That includes Google, which will now be CEO’d by Sundar Pichai (one less Twitter CEO candidate).

Its site? https://abc.xyz/. Strangely enough, Google doesn’t own Alphabet.com (yet?).

BONUS: Click this period and the site links to hooli.xyz (a Silicon Valley reference)

The CEO of Alphabet will be Google CEO and co-founder Larry Page. His missive on Google’s blog (headlined G is for Google) explains what the new holding company is:

What is Alphabet? Alphabet is mostly a collection of companies. The largest of which, of course, is Google. This newer Google is a bit slimmed down, with the companies that are pretty far afield of our main Internet products contained in Alphabet instead.

Sergey Brin, co-founder of Google, will serve as Alphabet’s president (which includes the X lab), and Eric Schmidt will be chairman. In fact, he digs the new name:

Page went on to say:

Our company is operating well today, but we think we can make it cleaner and more accountable. So we are creating a new company, called Alphabet. I am really excited to be running Alphabet as CEO with help from my capable partner, Sergey, as President.

I guess we don’t want to have a Google+ or Glass kerfluffle again, where a product drags the mothership through the mud. Page basically confirms this by saying:

…the whole point is that Alphabet companies should have independence and develop their own brands.

If they fail, they die. But they do less damage to the umbrella.

The stock will be changing over from Google to Alphabet, but still trading under GOOGL and GOOG (which were set up after its stock split). The company says this will allow them to focus on Google as a product even more than before, and at the same time, Google will also be able to regain its focus on its own products.

Google’s main business will include search, ads, maps, apps, YouTube and Android and the related technical infrastructure. Nest will report up to Alphabet.

It didn’t seem that Pichai, who heads up all of Google’s most important products, had a chance at becoming Google’s CEO (ahead of Page) anytime soon. Pretty creative way to work around that, I’d say.

It looks like the stock market is reacting favorably to the announcement. Google’s…er Alphabet’s stock is up over 6 percent after hours.

Source…. ,

” Forget the Crocodile Hunter, Here ‘s a Crocodile Rider…” !!!

 ‘Barefoot Bushman’ keeps dozens of giant reptiles on his farm including an 800kg monster named Brian… despite been bitten 40 times

  • A 65-year-old man from Queensland, Australia, likes nothing better than to spend his time riding crocodiles
  • Coined the ‘Barefoot Bushman’, Rob Bredl owns a wildlife park on his 175-acre farm 
  • The Bushman has been bitten 40 times by crocodiles and other venemous creatures
  • Mr Bredl enjoys riding his 800 kilo crocodile named Brian and owns 40 juvenile and 8 adult crocodiles as well
  • The bushman’s family is also involved in his wildlife park that began with his father in 1970

A 65-year-old man from Queensland, who likes nothing better than to hitch a ride on crocodiles’ backs, is giving even the crocodile hunter a run for his money.

Rob Bredl, coined ‘The Barefoot Bushman,’ has been bitten more than 40 times by crocodiles and venomous snakes but won’t stop ‘playing’ with his 800 kilo croc named Brian.

Bredl owns eight adult crocs and 40 juvenile, many up to 15 feet in length.

Rob Bredl is the crocodile riding man from Queenslan who is giving the crocodile hunter a run for his money

Rob Bredl is the crocodile riding man from Queensland who is giving the crocodile hunter a run for his money

The 65-year-old (left), coined 'The Barefoot Bushman', has been bitten more than 40 times by crocodiles and venomous snakes but won't stop 'playing' with his 800 kilo croc named Brian (right)

Ride 'em cowboy! Mr Bredl owns eight adult crocs and 40 juvenile ones, many up to 15 feet in length

Ride ’em cowboy! Mr Bredl owns eight adult crocs and 40 juvenile ones, many up to 15 feet in length

The family of reptiles and the Bushman live on a 175-acre farm in Airlie Beach in the Whitsunday’s region of Queensland and are part of a conservation program lead by Bredl.

As well as breeding the crocodile, Bredle has opened up his home to the public to watch and learn about vicious reptile, he’s lovingly nicknamed ‘salties.’

Bredl is well known for his antics with crocodiles, which include sitting on their backs, and enticing them to the water’s edge and grabbing them out of the water head first.

The family of reptiles and the Bushman live on a 175-acre farm in Airlie Beach in the Whitsunday's region of Queensland and are part of a conservation program lead by Bredl

Now sit! As well as breeding crocodiles, Bredle has opened up his home to the public to watch and learn about the vicious reptiles, he's lovingly nicknamed 'salties'

Despite the theatrical wrestling seen on the farm, Bredl has no illusions about how dangerous the animals are

Despite the theatrical wrestling seen on the farm, Bredl has no illusions about how dangerous the animals are

Alongside ‘salties’ the farm is home to emus, koalas, wallabies, snakes, birds and a range of other reptiles.

Bredl told Daily Mail Australia: ‘When it comes to crocs, everyone wants the drama, the danger…They freak out.’

With groups of 20 or more coming to watch the bizarre relationship between Bredl and his reptilian pets, the bushman said: ‘It blows them away what I can do with the crocs.’

Bredl believes he's the 'luckiest, crazy person who has ever lived'. He continued: 'I have been bitten by snakes and crocodiles and I'm still here'

Bredl believes he’s the ‘luckiest, crazy person who has ever lived’. He continued: ‘I have been bitten by snakes and crocodiles and I’m still here’

Mr Bredl has been bitten over 40 times by both crocs and venemous snakes. He said: 'I have had four bites from deadly snakes, but on those occasions no venom was released'

He is well known for his antics with crocodiles, which include sitting on their backs, and enticing them to the water's edge and grabbing them out of the water head first

With groups of 20 or more coming to watch the bizarre relationship between Mr Bredl and his reptilian pets, the bushman said: 'It blows them away what I can do with the crocs'

With groups of 20 or more coming to watch the bizarre relationship between Mr Bredl and his reptilian pets, the bushman said: ‘It blows them away what I can do with the crocs’

With a brain the size of your thumb, the Saltwater Crocodile (pictured) is an extremely dangerous creature, despite their slow movements on land

With a brain the size of your thumb, the Saltwater Crocodile (pictured) is an extremely dangerous creature, despite their slow movements on land

The Barefoot Bushman also used his nickname for a documentary that he filmed of his endeavours

Tine for a rest: With a family history in dealing with exotic animals Mr Bredl involves his whole family in the farm's operation

‘Their actions are all totally instinctive,’ said Bredl.

‘They are much more dangerous when they are in the water. Once they are out of the water, they can’t run, despite what others have said.’

Earning his name for walking barefoot through the Outback, the Barefoot Bushman also used the name for a documentary that he filmed of his endeavours.

Alongside his niece, Bredl's father Josef and mother Rita set up one of the first private zoos in Australia and in 1970 set up the crocodile farm to breed them

‘My niece, Karla Bredl, was an attendant at our wildlife park and was attacked in 1997 when she was 21. She was bitten by a croc called Solomon, who had no teeth,’ he explained.

The jaws of the animal are strong enough to crush bones and left Karla with a broken thigh and pelvis.

Alongside his niece, Bredl’s father Josef and mother Rita set up one of the first private zoos in Australia and in 1970 set up the crocodile farm to breed them.

But despite recently turning 65, Bredl has no plans for retirement: ‘I will probably keep going until I fall over. I have a bit of arthritis now, and am slowing down, but the good thing is that as the crocodiles get bigger, they also slow down.’

Alongside 'salties' the farm is home to emus, koalas, wallabies, snakes, birds and a range of other reptiles (pictured)

Alongside ‘salties’ the farm is home to emus, koalas, wallabies, snakes, birds and a range of other reptiles (pictured)

Source….www. dailymail.co.uk

Natarajan