
India has produced many young innovator brains working in several fields such as medicine, computing, communications and energy and they are registering their names at global platform now. They are hardworking and greatly innovative at minds.
They are ready to represent the future of technology equipped with Indian brains in the world. The best part of the story is that they all are of age below 35 years.
The editors of Technology Review, that is an MIT publication, have collected the names of technologists and scientists who are under 35 years of age and doing great in their respective fields of job.
They termed the list of the technologists as the TR35. The MIT publication Technology Review has been doing this since 1999. The list of 2007 has been published. The seventh class of outstanding innovators has the names of four Indian Innovators in the list.
The names of these Indian technologists are as Tapan Parikh, Sanjit Biswas, Partha Ranganathan and Dr Shetal Shah. They are among the TR35 personalities and Young Innovators selected this year from all around the globe. Mark Zuckerberg’s name, who has become famous for creating social-networking site Facebook, is also in the list of Young Innovators.
Tapan Parikh, 33, has been chosen as Humanitarian of the Year for his innovation of technology for the developing countries. Parikh is a PhD student in computer science at the University of Washington. He has invented an information system customized for the functioning of small-businesses in the developing countries.
Sanjit Biswas has invented a technology that has been proved as helpful for the poor people to access the Internet service wirelessly.
Partha Rangnathan is currently associated with HP labs as the principal research scientist. He is, with all his technological innovations, working hard to evolve a technology to reduce the greenhouse-gas emissions.
Dr Shetal Shah of State University of New York has done a marvelous job by spending hundreds of hours in ambulances that transport ill premature babies to New York University Medical Center’s specialised neonatal unit to notice noticed how troublesome these bumpy rides were to the babies and patients. She has invented a device to measure forces imparted on patients during transport or trauma.
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