If you look carefully at the blue fish in the water below, you can discern INDIA written faintly on the body. Well it is not a fish but India’s first indigenous designed Autonomous Underwater Vehicle (AUV). I have a story about it for you.
I first met Ammar in Delhi after he reached me through the India Brand Equity Foundation. I travelled to the Delhi College of Engineering campus and met the larger team of 8 students. You should have been there with me to see the kick ass energy this team has. They have gone ahead and built a 4th generation AUV that has been the only Indian participant at the prestigious annual competition hosted by the Space and Naval Warfare Systems Centre, San Diego.
They have not won yet. They lost to the Israelis and the Americans. One reason – the US team has the support of an entire fab for the circuitry right inside the university. The DCE team was building it themselves on a circuit board using a solder.
The kind of applications for such a thing is amazing. It can travel 2km on its own. Can identify objects. Follow a path intelligently. And all onboard, right from the power to the brain. Applications range from security to fish patterns. In any other country, they would have received funding, or would have been kidnapped by the armed forces months ago. In our case, this team is struggling to raise a fund of just Rs. 20 lakhs to buy equipment.
They footed my bill at the College Canteen! So I got them over to meet a couple of international angel investors who were speechless after the meeting about how they were able to see something like this without an NDA. It would be very difficult for the team to raise professional funding as the IP is university controlled. The Dean of Research, Dr. R.K. Sinha is wonderful and has got the Institute to be more outward looking but for those benefits to reach innovators within will still take years after the IITs first get their act in place!
So what happens in the meanwhile? Ammar and his eight muskeeteers will graduate in a year and get picked up by some software company. VCs will continue funding social community startups. Angels will never get to know.
I wonder how we could change it. We have adopted the AUV DCE team as our mascot. I am speaking to every friend, every one I know to get these guys 20 lakhs over one year. If any of you can help, and it is not only money that they need but equipment in kind and mentors, please get in touch with Ammar and the team at auv@dce.edu/9873999040 or me at sanjukt.saha@onebillionminds.com.
At One Billion Minds, we are trying to see if team like this need not go a begging.
- Connecting a World Changer / George Page - February 17, 2012
- Roar of the Cloud - September 22, 2010
- IIT Kanpur Golden Jubilee Initiative: The Next50 Global Innovation Challenge - March 5, 2010
Sanjukt
do not be skeptical from the beginning (regarding UNAVAILABLE in subject line.) See a doctor if required. Best wishes!!
Try contacting folks at http://www.i2indiaventures.com
I heard they are interested in investing in commercializing innovations like these from colleges, R&D labs etc.
I am not sure how strong DCE alumni community is. But that will be a good place to start spreading the word.
True and disappointing to read. Such things keep repeating. I don’t think that the supposed ecosystem has the stomach for even such a small risk capital.
It is such a nice thing to see. I can guess the passion they have and can see the strong feelings YOU have. I wish them all luck.
What you said about the kids going to software companies is the ultimate truth. And yeah it is not good. But what makes them do so? Even with education, people look for establish ways to prestige — and for us, the easiest is to become a software engineer for an MNC. When these guys were kids, these standards were set by their parents. Again reinforced by parents of their prospective spouses (I personally know some great guys who’ve joined Infosys/Microsoft because they were planning to get married). Anything unconventional gets defended here: we have such a big insecurity feeling. The economic boom didn’t really help us recover from that. Ultimately, in this complex world, the only benchmark of success is how much money one can manage to possess.