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Bengaluru’s IT giants must wake up to the Al storm or risk obsolescence

Hindustan Times Delhi

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September 12, 2025

I first visited Bengaluru in the 1990s, when its airport was a modest structure with a single civilian runway and the roads were seemingly empty. The city felt like a frontier outpost. Its IT leaders were hungry and ambitious, willing to jump on any opportunity presented to them. They believed they could change the world—and they did.

- Vivek Wadhwa

Fast forward three decades. The airport is now a gleaming global hub, the traffic is legendary, and Bengaluru has become synonymous with IT. But when I meet the same leaders who once built this powerhouse, I hear nostalgia rather than vision. They reminisce about their past triumphs, but when I propose radical projects that could save lives and reduce suffering, I get only excuses for why they cannot — or will not — do more.

Look up at the Bengaluru sky and you can literally see the dark clouds of change on the horizon. Artificial intelligence is reshaping industries at a pace even Silicon Valley finds dizzying. Yet the IT veterans act as if these clouds will pass, just as previous storms have. At a recent Infosys Instep celebration, Nandan Nilekani, Narayana Murthy, and Salil Parekh chuckled that obituaries have been written for the IT industry before, and it has always survived. True—but this time the threat is existential.

In my book From Incremental to Exponential, I explained why the complacency of incumbents almost always ends in disaster. Once-dominant Fortune 500 companies become “toast’—roadkill on the highway of technological change—because they mistake momentum for immortality. Think of Kodak, which invented the digital camera but died protecting its film business. Or Nokia, once the king of mobile phones, blindsided by Apple. Or Blockbuster, laughing at Netflix until it became a case study in arrogance. Everything looks fine until it suddenly isn’t.

MEER VERHALEN VAN Hindustan Times Delhi

Hindustan Times Delhi

CANADA: INDIANS AMONG 5 DEAD IN DEVASTATING FIRE

Indian nationals were among five people who died ina devastating fire in Brampton in Canada’s Ontario province, according to the Consulate General of India in Toronto.

time to read

1 min

November 29, 2025

Hindustan Times Delhi

Govt to infuse ₹4.5K-cr in SCL Mohali

The government will pour in ₹4,500 crore over the next three years to modernise the Semi-Conductor Laboratory (SCL) in Mohali and scale up its production a hundredfold, minister for IT and electronics Ashwini Vaishnaw announced on Friday, making it clear the facility will remain in government hands.

time to read

3 mins

November 29, 2025

Hindustan Times Delhi

Hindustan Times Delhi

7 killed as overloaded dumper overturns on car in Saharanpur

Seven members of a family, including a four-year-old boy, died after an overloaded dumper lost control and overturned onto their car near the Delhi-Dehradun expressway in Saharanpur district of Uttar Pradesh on Friday, a police officer said, adding that the dumper’s driver was allegedly intoxicated and fled the scene immediately after the accident. Efforts are underway to arrest him, he added.

time to read

1 min

November 29, 2025

Hindustan Times Delhi

India seen as a reliable partner by Indo-Pacific, Global South: Rajnath

India’s economic rise, technological capabilities and principled foreign policy have resulted in the country becoming “a voice of balance and responsibility” in a swiftly changing global environment, “with countries across the Indo-Pacific and the Global South viewing us as a reliable partner,” defence minister Rajnath Singh said on Friday.

time to read

1 min

November 29, 2025

Hindustan Times Delhi

Hindustan Times Delhi

India played key role in shaping COP30 outcome

The establishment of a two-year work programme on the Paris Agreement’s Article 9.1, which mandates that developed countries provide resources to developing nations for climate action, was a significant outcome atthe 2025 United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP30) in Brazil's Belém. Union environment minister Bhupender Yadav, who led India’s delegation at COP30, said this re-anchors the global climate finance debate in terms of the actual legal obligations of developed nations under the agreement. In an interview with HT, Yadav said he believed that COP30 has restored faith in multilateralism with developing countries seeing a structured process capable of holding developed nations accountable for the first time in years. Edited excerpts:

time to read

4 mins

November 29, 2025

Hindustan Times Delhi

Taming abuse and hate online

The apex court's directive on user-generated content is timely — but policy should be nuanced to filter bad content and not throttle free speech

time to read

2 mins

November 29, 2025

Hindustan Times Delhi

NITISH RELEASES NEW TRANCHE OF PROMISED ₹10K TO BIHAR WOMEN

Bihar chief minister Nitish Kumar on Friday released another tranche of 210,000 to one million women under Mukhyamantri Mahila Rojgar Yojana, an initiative of the state government to boost entrepreneurship among women.

time to read

1 min

November 29, 2025

Hindustan Times Delhi

Hindustan Times Delhi

Delhi marks second-longest streak of ‘very poor’ air days

Delhi's air quality index (AQI) remained above 300 for the 23rd consecutive day, the second-longest spell of ‘very poor’ or worse air days since 2019, according to Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) data.

time to read

2 mins

November 29, 2025

Hindustan Times Delhi

Admissions to nursery kick off; proximity to school key criteria

Most major private unaided schools gave priority to proximity in their points-based selection criteria as the admission cycle for nursery, pre-primary, and Class 1 in Delhi's for the 2026-27 academic session began on Friday. Applications will open on December 4 and close on December 27.

time to read

2 mins

November 29, 2025

Hindustan Times

'COP30 a decisive win for developing nations'

Environment minister Bhupender Yadav said the recent UN Climate Change Conference (COP30) was a decisive victory for developing nations, citing a new two-year work programme on climate finance that he sees as having restored faith in multilateralism after years of stalled negotiations

time to read

1 min

November 29, 2025

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