Page 305 - DCAP404 _Object Oriented Programming
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Object-oriented Programming




                    Notes            In contrast to the approach adopted by many countries, the US model, as Segal describes,
                                     has the private sector as the main engine of technological growth, funding more than two-
                                     thirds of research and development,  while the  federal government funds most  basic
                                     research. He extols the culture of working closely together generally among academia,
                                     industry, and government, despite ‘stove-piping (the failure to share information and
                                     ideas across organisational boundaries), and turf battles.’
                                     Multidisciplinary Research

                                     An  example of such collaborative research project  mentioned in the book  is Bio-X,  a
                                     massive multidisciplinary research  programme in  Stanford University  working at  the
                                     intersection of medicine, science,  and engineering. “People and  ideas circulate  freely,
                                     through informal gatherings and the planned meetings that Bio-X hosts – cocktail  and
                                     coffee hours where bright graduate students can make pitches to the venture capital firms
                                     clustered on Sand Hill road in Menlo Park.”
                                     Elaborates Segal that what is critical beyond the free flow of ideas is the existence of strong
                                     incentives to move inventions from the lab to the market. In the US, ideas can make one
                                     rich, because intellectual property is protected and individual scientists are able to exploit
                                     their breakthroughs for commercial gain, he informs. “The young entrepreneur has many
                                     role models to emulate: the Sergey Brin, Steve Jobs, and others who demonstrate the
                                     massive rewards that come to those who execute good ideas well.”
                                     Underlining the risk-embracing culture among scientists and entrepreneurs, Segal speaks
                                     of how failure is seen as a badge of honour, an entrepreneurial rite of passage; and about
                                     how invention and innovation are locally driven. “Yes, the federal government was the
                                     driving force for large-scale projects such as ARPANET (Advanced Research Projects Agency
                                     Network), the predecessor to the Internet, but the tradition of the individual tinker and
                                     the culture of making things in the backyard with a group of like-minded friends remain
                                     strong.”
                                     Brain Circulation

                                     It should be heartening to read the portrayal of India as not being Delhi-driven but seeing
                                     action  in many public-private partnerships,  such as  in the form of  IT giants  training
                                     thousands of computer science graduates annually, and their working with local colleges
                                     to develop relevant courses for engineers.
                                     Segal also finds that technology entrepreneurs and returnees to be especially important in
                                     building a culture of innovation. He cites the Nasscom’s statistics that between 2001 and
                                     2007, 35,000 IT professionals returned to India; and the findings of a survey of Indian
                                     executives living in the US that 68 per cent were actively looking for an opportunity to
                                     return home, and 12 per cent had already decided to do so.

                                     This is ‘brain circulation,’ the way the Berkeley scholar AnnaLee Saxenian calls the flow or
                                     returnees from Silicon Valley to China and India, writes Segal. These individuals, he says,
                                     no longer represent ‘brain drain’ and a loss to their home countries, but neither are they a
                                     clear-cut ‘brain gain’ since they often retain business and personal connections to the US.
                                     Examples of the ‘new  argonauts’ (Saxenian’s phrase for those  travelling between two
                                     worlds) that Segal  lists are  Rosen Sharma,  with degrees  from IIT  Delhi and Cornell
                                     University who lives in California and travels to New Delhi and Pune to oversee local
                                     employees of Solidcore, a developer of security software; and Rajiv Mody, who founded
                                     Sasken Communication  Technologies  in  Silicon  Valley  and moved  the company  to
                                     Bangalore, and now travels back to the US and pays US taxes.

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