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IBM India Lab: The Innovation Powerhouse
More than 2,000 employees in IBM's India Lab collaborate with the 50 plus product development teams across the other IBM Labs, engaged in over 600 client projects worldwide-huge number by any standard
Sudesh Prasad
Thursday, April 12, 2007
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Set up in 1992, IBM's India Software Lab (ISL) with 2,400 employees, has come a long way. Incidentally, IBM India showed the largest growth in terms of manpower in 2006, growing by 16,024 with a headcount of 52,000 employees. The lab has managed to transform itself to live up to the product requirements of IBM's global customers. Apart from this, IBM has 165 small development centers for IBM Software Group around the world. ISL primarily develops products for its software group across the application infrastructure, software development tools, data/information management, collaboration and productivity tools.

Lab Focus Areas
ISL develops solutions centered on enterprise application integration, business intelligence, RFID, security and privacy and content management. On the services front, the lab also provides consulting, education and support for IBM middleware to clients, IBM business partners and sales teams on middleware. The Lab's services team boasts of enabling over 600 clients worldwide and supporting more than 90 of its business partner. The lab is also engaged in many IBM middleware-based large IT deployment projects.

Harish K Grama, VP, IBM India Software Lab (extreme right) and Kalpana Margabandhu, program director, IBM Application and Integration Middleware Division, IBM India Software Lab (lady on extreme left) with the Lab team

The man at the helm at ISL is Harish Grama, VP, IBM India Software Lab who heads a team of 2,400 engineers working on cutting edge products and technologies. Highlighting the importance of the Lab, Harish Grama, says "ISL develops one third of the applications developed by IBM globally, and has become the 7th region and no more part of ASEAN."

ISL develops one third of the applications developed by IBM globally, and has become the 7th region and no more part of ASEAN

Harish Grama, VP,
IBM India Software Lab

IBM: Vital Statistics
  • A network of over 60 software research and development laboratories worldwide that develop, test and support a wide range of emerging and established technologies spanning software and services

  • Invests more than $5 bn in R&D annually

  • Has a laboratory population of more than 28,000 researchers and developers, with more than 20% working directly with clients

  • In the last 13 years, IBM has garnered more patents than any other company

  • Works closely with a network of more than 100,000 business partners worldwide

  • In 2006, the company conducted more than 10,000 engagements between its researchers, developers and clients, a 55% increase from the previous year

 

 

 

 

 

 

Apart from these, ISL is also actively pursuing some of the emerging technologies that include technology development projects such as extensible markup language (XML), RFID, service oriented architecture, Web services, MDM (Master Data Management), virtualization, autonomic computing and grid computing. ISL also happens to be the lead lab for MDM.

Open Standard Initiatives
Locally, the lab is very active in collaborating with academia. From the broadcasting of the Open Standards based software technical sessions via satellite to over 10,000 students of the local technical university, to researching collaborations with leading technical and science institutes through the IBM Center for Advanced Studies (CAS), we are engaged on several fronts in building the requisite skills ecosystem in the country.

Suparna Bhattacharya: Senior Technical Staff Member at the IBM India Software Lab
Development @ India Software Lab
  • Two rational software products are driven completely out of the lab

  • Working on emerging technologies and developments such as Web Services, RFID, SOA, Master Data Management, Viper, Web services, WebSphere Application Server, Autonomic Computing, Virtualization

  • Works on Open Standards, Open Source and Open Innovation

  • Provide expertise to clients and help them become more innovative and competitive

Young Achiever

It was IIT Kharagpur's first tryst with IBM which came for campus recruitment in 1993 and selected Suparna Bhattacharya, an Electronics and Communication Engineering graduate from the institute. Since then, there has been no looking back for Suparna.

She works as a senior technical staff member at the IBM India Software Lab's worldwide Linux Technology Center. Incidentally, 26% of the total employee population at IBM India consists of women and it runs a program Women in Technology Initiatives to support the advancement and recognition of IBM's female technical talent.

Suparna is also credited of being one of the main contributors to the file system aspects and productization of DB2-Datalinks, a technology invented at the IBM Almaden Research Center for linking database and file system data with referential integrity and consistency guarantees. She got introduced to Linux Kernel and Open Source seven years ago and chaired various sessions at the international Linux Kernel summits. Besides technology, she is also part of the core team responsible for SEI CMM Level 4 and 5 attainments for IBM India as well as Integrated Product Development rollout for ISL. She has co-credited with a US patent number 6728716 titled Client-server filter computing system supporting relational database records and linked external files operable for distributed file system. Her co-inventors included Inderpal Narang and Karen Brannon.

ISL closely works with the Linux open community globally to make Linux more robust for enterprise adoption by focusing on the performance and scalability aspects of Linux Kernel. Some of the other ISL initiatives in the open space are Apache's Geronimo project-based Gluecode Development Center, serving the needs of the low-end application server space, ODF (Open Document Format) which aims at helping businesses edit and save their information in an Open Standards based format.

Talent Attraction and Retention
Cheap labor pool is the last thing IBM has in mind. Emphasizing this point, Grama says, "The ISL is one of the largest outside of the USA. IBM has never played the cost arbitrage game and whenever it decided to set up its software labs outside of US, it was driven by the need to go where the talent was." Getting adequately qualified and fresh talent pool of engineers is an area of concern for most companies and ISL is no exception. As Grama puts it, "Out of every 100 applications, only three get selected." To get over the employability factor, IBM has entered into collaborations with several universities in Karnataka and elsewhere to groom the talent and hire them once they pass out.

Major IBM Labs

Beyond Product Development
It is not only the hardcore product development that the ISL is involved with. ISL was instrumental in initiating the project Aksharam to develop a collaborative IT platform for helping secondary school teachers to improve teaching effectiveness. For this, the emphasis was on rural and semi-urban population, and targeted the geographically spread teaching community to share teaching aids and content with each other. ISL is also closely involved in promoting growth and development for the community through its local skills development drive. The lab also conducts technical education sessions via satellite for over 8,000 students at Visvesvaraya Technological University in Bangalore. These are aimed at promoting research and collaboration with leading technical and science institutes.

Sudesh Prasad
sudeshp@cybermedia.co.in

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