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2012 lo Vajpayee asked CBN ....


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Just now, Sachin200 said:

Idhi pharma hub atleast vi daniki Anna bagunaye . Unlike isuzi sales shop etc 

 

Amazon meedha 

Govt lo unna vallu as credit teesukuntaru., Common adhi . Same Microsoft nakka sir Ela chinchukuntunado alage edhi kooda 

that concludes this discussion - bringing microsoft in 1998 is not same as amazon investing its own building , because of its expansion

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8 minutes ago, TheBrahmabull said:

@3$% - evado 2018 lo RTI esthe 2014 nundi 18 varaku HYD lo okka new investment kooda raledu ani sakshathu TS govt replied.. it was from some journalist.

old posts lo esina brother.. thread gurthu ledu.. eellu iga investments gurinchi matladutharu... 5 years lo Amaravathi enduku develop kaledu antaru..

Lol. Yes. Last 5 years lo TG ki okka company kooda raaledu .

Anni Amaravati ki vellayee. 

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1 minute ago, snoww said:

Lol. Yes. Last 5 years lo TG ki okka company kooda raaledu .

Anni Amaravati ki vellayee. 

lol... can you show me the proof , majors investments in between 2014 to 2018 ? lol - it might take some time for me to find that RTI document proof.. LOL.

 

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1 minute ago, bostonBOSS said:

bro. intha serious ga trolling chesthunnav endi ITm gaadini CITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$yCITI_c$y

@3$% - anduke ekkuva lagaku ani chepthe intaledu pilagadu.. konchem trs anna, sirio anna, most imp - esupadam anna abhimanam

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1 minute ago, TheBrahmabull said:

@3$% - anduke ekkuva lagaku ani chepthe intaledu pilagadu.. konchem trs anna, sirio anna, most imp - esupadam anna abhimanam

ee pichhuka burra tho ela brathukutunnado endo .. $s@d 

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12 minutes ago, TheBrahmabull said:

that concludes this discussion - bringing microsoft in 1998 is not same as amazon investing its own building , because of its expansion

Microsoft's passage to India

 
Naazneen Karmali
Naazneen KarmaliForbes Staff
I write about Asia's wealth creators.
This article is more than 2 years old.

When Bill Gates was looking for a location for Microsoft's second software development center outside the U.S. (the first was in Israel), he chose Hyderabad, capital of the south Indian state of Andhra Pradesh.

This surprised a lot of people. When they set up shop in India, most computer companies opt for Bangalore, 500 kilometers south of Hyderabad (see map). The Silicon Valley of Bangalore is teeming with talented software engineers. Typical annual salary for a new hire: $4,100. IBM, Intel and Compaq are only a few of the computer companies that have hung out their shingles in Bangalore in recent years.

By comparison, Hyderabad, the former home of the nawabs (Indian princes), is a backwater. Andhra Pradesh is one of India's poorer states; over 70% of its 73 million inhabitants live in countryside villages. Hyderabad (pop. 3 million) doesn't have an international airport.

So why did Gates choose Hyderabad? Because successful Bangalore is now bursting at the seams. Cars clog the roads. Power regularly fails.

Real estate prices are high. Companies often pay stock options to keep valued employees, but even then retaining workers is a problem.

Hyderabad, on the other hand, is just beginning to take off. Few traffic jams or overbooked restaurants here. $75,000 buys you a house in a good neighborhood that would cost almost $100,000 in Bangalore. Newly minted software engineers typically work for $3,500 a year, 15% below Bangalore scale, and there are plenty of them: About one in four Indian software engineers is a native of Andhra Pradesh, according to a survey by Nasscom, a software industry association.

 

 

 

Hyderabad has something else going for it: Nara Chandrababu Naidu, Andhra Pradesh's ambitious chief minister. Naidu, 48, would like nothing better than to upstage Bangalore. Recognizing that Microsoft would attract more technology companies to Hyderabad, Naidu lobbied Gates hard when the multibillionaire visited India last year. He promised that Microsoft would receive favorable tax treatment (he essentially said that he would match the tax incentives that other states offer), continuous power supply and 8 hectares of land reserved for their center.

So far Naidu has been keeping his promises. "The local government has been very helpful," says S. Somasegar, an Indian-born general manager at Microsoft who's in charge of setting up the center. "They're also investing to improve the infrastructure." The World Bank has agreed to lend Naidu's government more than $1.5 billion for, among other things, building new roads and water supply projects.

Rushing to build up to the critical mass that Hyderabad needs to compete against Bangalore, Naidu's government has leased out buildings to house a new Indian Institute of Information Technology, where IBM has started a training school. Oracle will be investing over $10 million in a software development center in Hyderabad that will employ 250 people and is to open in late July. And Hitec City, a commercial complex built by a public/private partnership, will be opening in August. Naidu beams with pride: "Infotech is bound to emerge as a strategic sector which will both generate wealth and create employment opportunities."

Hyderabad: You'll be hearing more about it in the years ahead. n

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12 minutes ago, TheBrahmabull said:

that concludes this discussion - bringing microsoft in 1998 is not same as amazon investing its own building , because of its expansion

Again clarifying. CBN didn't bring Microsoft. They close it because Bangalore was costly , had traffic problem and real estate was cheap. They made sure they got everything for cheap and played CBN into doing that.

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10 minutes ago, TheBrahmabull said:

lol... can you show me the proof , majors investments in between 2014 to 2018 ? lol - it might take some time for me to find that RTI document proof.. LOL.

 

No need to find bro proof bro. 

Okka kotha company kooda raakundaane last 5 years lo TG exports double ayyayi.

May be it's a fake PPT and not true development like Amaravati case. 

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15 minutes ago, TheBrahmabull said:

that concludes this discussion - bringing microsoft in 1998 is not same as amazon investing its own building , because of its expansion

So why did Gates choose Hyderabad? Because successful Bangalore is now bursting at the seams. Cars clog the roads. Power regularly fails.

Real estate prices are high. Companies often pay stock options to keep valued employees, but even then retaining workers is a problem.

Hyderabad, on the other hand, is just beginning to take off. Few traffic jams or overbooked restaurants here. $75,000 buys you a house in a good neighborhood that would cost almost $100,000 in Bangalore. Newly minted software engineers typically work for $3,500 a year, 15% below Bangalore scale, and there are plenty of them: About one in four Indian software engineers is a native of Andhra Pradesh, according to a survey by Nasscom, a software industry association.

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15 minutes ago, sairamnfdb said:

Microsoft's passage to India

 
Naazneen Karmali
Naazneen KarmaliForbes Staff
I write about Asia's wealth creators.
This article is more than 2 years old.
  •  
  •  
  •  

When Bill Gates was looking for a location for Microsoft's second software development center outside the U.S. (the first was in Israel), he chose Hyderabad, capital of the south Indian state of Andhra Pradesh.

This surprised a lot of people. When they set up shop in India, most computer companies opt for Bangalore, 500 kilometers south of Hyderabad (see map). The Silicon Valley of Bangalore is teeming with talented software engineers. Typical annual salary for a new hire: $4,100. IBM, Intel and Compaq are only a few of the computer companies that have hung out their shingles in Bangalore in recent years.

By comparison, Hyderabad, the former home of the nawabs (Indian princes), is a backwater. Andhra Pradesh is one of India's poorer states; over 70% of its 73 million inhabitants live in countryside villages. Hyderabad (pop. 3 million) doesn't have an international airport.

So why did Gates choose Hyderabad? Because successful Bangalore is now bursting at the seams. Cars clog the roads. Power regularly fails.

Real estate prices are high. Companies often pay stock options to keep valued employees, but even then retaining workers is a problem.

Hyderabad, on the other hand, is just beginning to take off. Few traffic jams or overbooked restaurants here. $75,000 buys you a house in a good neighborhood that would cost almost $100,000 in Bangalore. Newly minted software engineers typically work for $3,500 a year, 15% below Bangalore scale, and there are plenty of them: About one in four Indian software engineers is a native of Andhra Pradesh, according to a survey by Nasscom, a software industry association.

 

 

 

Hyderabad has something else going for it: Nara Chandrababu Naidu, Andhra Pradesh's ambitious chief minister. Naidu, 48, would like nothing better than to upstage Bangalore. Recognizing that Microsoft would attract more technology companies to Hyderabad, Naidu lobbied Gates hard when the multibillionaire visited India last year. He promised that Microsoft would receive favorable tax treatment (he essentially said that he would match the tax incentives that other states offer), continuous power supply and 8 hectares of land reserved for their center.

So far Naidu has been keeping his promises. "The local government has been very helpful," says S. Somasegar, an Indian-born general manager at Microsoft who's in charge of setting up the center. "They're also investing to improve the infrastructure." The World Bank has agreed to lend Naidu's government more than $1.5 billion for, among other things, building new roads and water supply projects.

Rushing to build up to the critical mass that Hyderabad needs to compete against Bangalore, Naidu's government has leased out buildings to house a new Indian Institute of Information Technology, where IBM has started a training school. Oracle will be investing over $10 million in a software development center in Hyderabad that will employ 250 people and is to open in late July. And Hitec City, a commercial complex built by a public/private partnership, will be opening in August. Naidu beams with pride: "Infotech is bound to emerge as a strategic sector which will both generate wealth and create employment opportunities."

Hyderabad: You'll be hearing more about it in the years ahead. n

Arey ayya.. nenu bhi neeku aa roje mastu proofs ichina... iga nuvvu company owner billgates cheppina dani kante.. evaro rasina articles nammuthe evadu emcheyaleudu

By the way original ID tho raleni nuvve cheppali iga - only ee article pattukoni vosthav@3$%

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