Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

TCS, CMU tie up for research

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com

A prestigiou­s US university and Tata Consultanc­y Services have collaborat­ed to set up a state-of-the-art facility which its promoters say would lay the groundwork for the fourth industrial revolution by conducting cutting edge research.

The collaborat­ion comes more than a century after Jamshedji Tata came to this city known as the steel-making capital to understand technologi­es which he would later use to launch India’s own industrial revolution.

Top Indian industrial­ist Ratan Tata, joined by Carnegie Mellon University president Subra Suresh along with Tata Sons chairman N Chandrasek­aran broke the ground of the new TCS Hall at the university campus. Supported by an unpreceden­ted $35 million grant from TCS, which is the largest ever industry donation the CMU, the building when complete by next year, would become the hub of CMU and TCS collaborat­ions on promoting next generation technologi­es that will drive the 4th Industrial revolution, Suresh said.

“Today, we are not looking at heavy metal and millions of tons of steel. We are looking at a collaborat­ion of intellectu­al skills and the developmen­t of two countries together that might bring about global understand­ing between people,” Tata said.

Ratan Tata, Chairman emeritus of Tata Sons, described the CMU-TCS partnershi­p a visionary collaborat­ion of skills that will bring understand­ing between young people of India, the United States and other places in the world.

“The wide-ranging multi-national partnershi­p that is creating new research opportunit­ies, new student aid, and a brand-new facility for educationa­l research that we are celebratin­g today has deep roots. In fact, the historical parallels and connection­s between the Tata Group of companies and Carnegie Tech and Carnegie Mellon make this new chapter in our partnershi­p even more meaningful,” Suresh said.

“In the late 19th century - years before this university was founded - the Tata family patriarch, Jamshedji Tata, came to Pittsburgh—the steel capital of the world—to learn from expert steelmaker­s how to launch his own steel-making business in India,” he said.

“Years later, a company affiliated with one of Andrew Carnegie’s executives landed a contract to build the Tata plant in India, bringing to life the Jamshedji Tata goal that mirrored Andrew Carnegie’s life’s work: the great steel empire built here in Pittsburgh, and a great university, Carnegie Tech, now known as Carnegie Mellon as we celebrate it today,” he said.

Suresh said both institutio­ns will collaborat­e on mutual interests in fields such as cognitive systems and autonomous vehicles and robotics.

“TCS Hall will house a variety of activities in education and research, as well as the CMU Mechanical Engineerin­g and Robotics Department­s. And it’ll fit seamlessly into Carnegie Mellon’s pioneering work.”

 ?? MinT/FiLe ?? Ratan Tata is excited about the collaborat­ion
MinT/FiLe Ratan Tata is excited about the collaborat­ion
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