Explorer

IBM Enters MoU With Centre, To Focus On Semicon, AI, Quantum Computing. Here's What Rajeev Chandrasekhar Said On The Deal

Chandrasekhar said, "These three technologies represent tremendous opportunities for our academic ecosystems, start-ups, and the broader opportunity to create global-standard talent in India."

In a significant advancement for India's semiconductor sector, IBM has formalised a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the Government of India, focusing on Semiconductors, Artificial Intelligence (AI), and Quantum Computing. Highlighting the pivotal nature of this collaboration, IT Minister Rajeev Chandrasekhar emphasised, "This is certainly a very important day because these are the three of the four technologies that are going to shape the future of tech and innovation in the coming years – AI, Quantum (computing), and Semiconductor."

The minister further underlined the vast opportunities this partnership presents for India's technology sector and its populace.

Chandrasekhar stressed, "These three technologies represent tremendous opportunities for our academic ecosystems, start-ups, and the broader opportunity to create global-standard talent in India that can take advantage of these opportunities in Quantum (computing) semiconductors, and AI."

ALSO READ: Quantum Mission: How Institutions And Corporate Players In India Are Going Beyond The Binary

Earlier this year, IBM had inked an MoU with the Indian government to develop tailored courses aimed at training individuals for emerging technologies. These agreements were signed with bodies under the Ministries of Education and Skill Development and Entrepreneurship on September 27, under the auspices of Union Minister Dharmendra Pradhan.

IBM affirmed that the courses resulting from these MoUs will play a crucial role in preparing the youth with essential skills to thrive in the contemporary workforce landscape.

Furthermore, IBM CEO Arvind Krishna had said in April this year that the company is expected to pause hiring for roles that it thinks could be replaced by artificial intelligence (AI) in the coming years. It means that roughly 7,800 jobs would be replaced by AI, the company said.

Krishna said, "I could easily see 30 per cent of that getting replaced by AI and automation over a five-year period." 

These non-customer-facing roles amount to roughly 26,000 workers, he said. The report also said that an IBM spokesperson clarified that this would mean roughly 7,800 jobs lost. However, part of any reduction would include not replacing roles vacated by attrition.

Top Headlines

Ubon 360-Degree Selfie Stick & Mr. Mike Review: One Gadget Wins, One Just Gets By
Ubon 360-Degree Selfie Stick & Mr. Mike Review: One Gadget Wins, One Just Gets By
Downloaded Ustaad Bhagat Singh For Free? Get Ready For A Rs 3 Lakh Fine
Downloaded Ustaad Bhagat Singh For Free? Get Ready For A Rs 3 Lakh Fine
Downloading Dhurandhar 2 From Telegram For Free? Get Ready To Pay Rs 3 Lakh Fine
Downloading Dhurandhar 2 From Telegram For Free? Get Ready To Pay Rs 3 Lakh Fine
Sent An Email By Mistake? Here Is How To Unsend It Before Anyone Reads It
Sent An Email By Mistake? Here Is How To Unsend It Before Anyone Reads It

Videos

BREAKING: Iran Strikes Ben Gurion Airport, Escalates Drone & Missile Attacks on Israel
BREAKING: PM Modi Sets Record as India’s Longest-Serving Head of Government
War Update: Trump Issues 48-Hour Ultimatum to Iran Over Hormuz, Threatens Energy Infrastructure Strikes
Breaking: Iran Strikes Southern Israel: Arad, Dimona Hit by Ballistic Missiles; Over 180 Injured
Breaking Update: Iran Strikes Israel’s Dimona Nuclear Site with Ballistic Missiles, Panic Ensues

Photo Gallery

25°C
New Delhi
Rain: 100mm
Humidity: 97%
Wind: WNW 47km/h
See Today's Weather
powered by
Accu Weather
Embed widget