
BT consortium starts roll call…
By David Meyer
Published: 4 December 2007 09:16 GMT
BT is leading a consortium it hopes will drive collaborative research between the UK and India, with a strong focus on new fixed and wireless networking technologies.
The consortium will set up a virtual graduate research school called the India-UK Advanced Technology Centre (IU-ATC). With $3m in funding already secured, the IU-ATC will see PhD and post-doctorate students from the UK and India studying in each others' countries and working on a next-generation network and general ICT research. The current funding will cover 23 students, although the split between the countries is yet to be determined.
BT will be joined in the consortium by IT consultancy Intergence Systems, plus 10 UK universities: Birmingham, Bristol, Cambridge, Lancaster, Queen Mary, Southampton, St Andrews, Surrey, University College London and Ulster.
The Indian side of the collaboration will involve the technology institutes of Delhi, Madras and Mumbai, the Institute of Science in Bangalore and companies including BT India, Infosys, Midas Communications, NMSWorks Software, Sasken Communications, Tejas Networks and Wipro.
BT's group chief technology officer, Matt Bross, said: "The IU-ATC will accelerate competitive technology and knowledge transfer between the UK and India, as well as ensuring stronger collaborations between industry and academic institutions in both countries."
In a statement, BT said the initiative would involve the development of new services and technologies, the filing of patents and the "commercial exploitation of research through licensing and spinning out start-up companies".
Professor Gerard Parr, the IU-ATC's UK academic lead, said the project sought to "establish, for the first time, the support infrastructure and creative sponsorship opportunities that will enable successful collaboration between Britain and India's academic institutions, government and industry in general".
Parr said: "The long-term success of this kind of large-scale initiative is dependent upon the support received from industry and we have had excellent engagement and support from BT, Indian organisations and the British and Indian governments."
David Meyer writes for ZDNet.co.uk
In addition, you will manage the development of a range of support materials for teachers and students linked with the syllabus portfolio.You will be ...
C# / .Net / Java Developer (ASP.Net, SQL, C#, Java) sought by one of the world? They pride themselves on their technology using RAD and Agile ...
Software Engineer with strong OO development skills (C#, Java or C++) sought by leading Risk modelling / finance market analysis software solution ...
Agenda Setters 2008
Welcome to the ninth annual Agenda Setters poll – silicon.com's list of the top 50 most influential individuals in the technology and IT industries, from techies and CIOs to entrepreneurs and business leaders. Find out more in our latest special report.
Stories from the web...
Copyright © 2008 CBS Interactive Limited. All rights reserved. Top of page
Rob Bamforth Seeking memorable mobile apps Quocirca's Straight Talking: Why are there so few?
Stewart Baines How much SEO is too much? Net Effect: Plus 10 tips on boosting your site's profile