TechTrotter: Innovation Happens Everywhere

TechTrotter started as a global investigation into innovation hubs often overlooked by the mainstream press.

After two months in Brazil I relocated to India and my observations now cover technology in daily use, Web trends and weird and wonderful aspects of life in the world's largest democracy

To sumbmit your story ideas or contact the editor, send emails to:
editor@techtrotter.org

Become a fan of TechTrotter

Where Are TechTrotter Readers

TechTrotter on Twitter

Flickr Photostream

photo photo photo photo photo photo photo photo photo photo photo photo

TechtTotter

amanaie argentina Asia Auto rickshaw Bangalore Barack Obama Brazil chikodi chima Cricket Entrepreneurship espn Fabio Akita Facebook gilberto jr global voices IBM India John McCain journalism Marco Gomes Marcos Tanaka Microsoft Music Paulista Rio de Janeiro Samba Sao Paulo sao paulo traffic social media South America Startupi startups nigeria techcrunch techtrotter TechTrotter.org TEDIndia TED Talks the new york times the world is flat thomas friedman Twitter United States VentureBeat venture capital YouTube Brazil (23)
Entertainment (3)
Entrepreneurship (15)
Food (1)
India (19)
Innovation (23)
Investment (2)
Mainstream Media (3)
Music (1)
Rio de Janeiro (6)
Ruby on Rails (1)
Sao Paulo (16)
Social Entrepreneurship (2)
Social Media (15)
Society (4)
Startups (1)
Travel planning (5)
Uncategorized (21)
Video (12)
World Cup (1)

WP Cumulus Flash tag cloud by Roy Tanck and Luke Morton requires Flash Player 9 or better.

Tags

amanaie argentina Asia Auto rickshaw Bangalore Barack Obama Brazil chikodi chima Cricket Entrepreneurship espn Fabio Akita Facebook gilberto jr global voices IBM India John McCain journalism Marco Gomes Marcos Tanaka Microsoft Music Paulista Rio de Janeiro Samba Sao Paulo sao paulo traffic social media South America Startupi startups nigeria techcrunch techtrotter TechTrotter.org TEDIndia TED Talks the new york times the world is flat thomas friedman Twitter United States VentureBeat venture capital YouTube

African Tech

Share This

Bangalore: Day One in the electrojungle

Picture 1Last night, my neighbor’s snores were loud enough to wake the dead. I almost to put on the ceiling fan to drown out the noise,  but as the morning sun warms the wet clay, the near silence of night has given way to din of the day’s activities. Washing, cooking and the feeding babies all contribute to the sonic landscape. My Bangalore is the sound of water sloshing from buckets onto concrete floors, the sweet smell of wet clay and burnt petrol fumes, fried onions and spices.  With the sun overhead, Bangalore is alive,  bodies are everywhere, as are cars and cows, restaurants and shrines.

Having lived here before, albeit briefly, I feel I know what to expect out of this city–crippling traffic, frenetic energy and a friendly, welcoming atmosphere. This time will be different, as I am here to stay. As such, I’m looking at the city with a different set of eyes, though they are cast upon a familiar scene. I’m living in the ultimate Bangalore bachelor pad with Anu, a venture capitalist and Ram, one of my business partners at Ixoraa Media. Our complex has all the amenities, including a swimming pool, tennis courts and a game room with ping pong tables, and billiards.

Just down the road from our apartment are gleaming glass complexes for Microsoft, IBM and Fidelity Investments (though very corporate, the structures would win architecture awards if they were in Sao Paulo). Just across a narrow dirt road is the old Bangalore City Airport (HAL). While I slept off the jet lag and exhaustion of 35 travel hours, two fighter jets used the nearby runway, creating an incredible roar. Already this morning there have been three. Tell me more …

Brazil: Having no problems is a problem; Talking rails, management and innovation with Fabio Akita

IMG_1969Fabio Akita wants Brazilian businesses to fail. Really.

The Ruby on Rails evangelist and apostle of agile management also thinks that while nine out of 10 Brazilian startups will probably fail, this is good for business overall.  The quicker flaws are exposed, the sooner people can go about fixing them. “Having no problems is a problem,” Akita said. “You can’t improve if you assume you are not making mistakes.”

On a blissful evening in the depths of *cough* winter, we met at a lively cafe on Paulista Ave, to discuss the language and lifestyle of Ruby on Rails programming, as well as what barriers must be broken for Brazilian companies to take their place on the world stage. Besides the typical culprit, stifling bureaucracy and its attendant cronyism, inefficiency and top-down management, Akita said Brazilians have been programmed not to take risks. In spite of the pitfalls, entrepreneurs just think differently. “If they are entrepreneurs, they will try anything to make their dreams come true,” said Akita.

Fabio Akita is the author of the first book on Rails created for a Brazilian audience and a product manager at Locaweb – the largest web hosting company in Brazil, with the mission to make Rails ubiquitous in the Latin American open source community, according to his profile on Working With Rails.

Tell me more …