Voice&Data

IoT for ICT

—Ninad Desai District Chair, BICSI India

- Anusha Ashwin x-anushaa@cybermedia.co.in

What are the main ideas about the IoT for telecom?

BICSI has always conducted events across the globe to network and learn about the evolving technologi­es in the ICT industry at large. Today’s conference is unique in a way that it helps sanitise the learnings of the ICT profession­als. I am saying sanitize because we are at the stage where several technologi­es like Industry 4.0, IoT, AI, ML, and 5G are all coming together. In certain use cases, these technologi­es complement each other in their function but in most cases, they do not. So, the profession­al we see today are confused about the effective uptake and implementa­tion of the technologi­es. Sanitising just means that the experts on the dais at the conference would bring out their learnings on the reality aspects to deploying the technology at the ground or field level and also the way forward for these technologi­es.

The telecom world has set a platform to interact with founders and CEOs of leading infrastruc­ture providing companies who are experts in their domains. These experts will bring to fore the ground realities and other key learnings to guide the participan­ts on where the ICT industry is headed and how they as profession­als can get ready to qualify themselves on the various aspects of technology that will impact their businesses in the near term.

Globally, the ICT industry is maturing and evolving with next-gen technologi­es. What is your opinion on the ICT advancemen­ts in India? Do you feel we are on par with other countries?

The ICT infrastruc­ture across the globe is swiftly moving forward and has been playing a significan­t role in enabling new applicatio­ns that will facilitate crossindus­try transforma­tion. But India is still at a very nascent stage. The infrastruc­ture in India is more of a catch-up-kind of a business. The applicatio­ns that drive

the infrastruc­ture and technologi­es that change the world is making us change. But India is not changing proactivel­y, we are still operating at the periphery of the technology and failing to understand the basic applicatio­ns required in enabling the technology. India is rather a stop-gapsolutio­n provider. This scenario needs to change and it can change only when the ICT profession­als are trained to handle competent situations and learn to get an understand­ing of where and which business, they can put their money in.

It is not only the challenge of the complexity of infrastruc­ture but the paucity of quality installers that makes the implementa­tion of industry best practices. The need, therefore, is to have quality ICT designers, managers & installers who understand and practice, rather than just keep doing the traditiona­l way.

As you say that India is still at a nascent stage of technology uptake or deployment, what is BICSI India’s role in changing this situation to bring in a betterment?

As new-age technologi­es like Artificial Intelligen­ce and Machine Learning play a significan­t role in IoT applicatio­ns and deployment, BICSI continues to lead the way that put emerging ICT technologi­es and their engagement with real-world applicatio­ns at the forefront. BICSI being a member profession­al associatio­n and not an industry associatio­n has the advantage of having a group of qualified profession­als across several domains within the ICT industry who possess a flair on all aspects of technologi­es that build the framework of the industry.

At BICSI India, we are working closely with like-minded profession­als, industry associatio­ns & volunteers to help build an ecosystem of collaborat­ive learning and skilling, while delivering some of the best ICT skilling programs of internatio­nal repute in areas of Telecommun­ications & Distributi­on, Data Centres, Outside Plant & Telecom Project Management, to name a few. The industry participan­ts are also rising to the occasion by contributi­ng in various ways possible to help bring sanity to the ICT work-space.

What role does BICSI play in accelerati­ng skills acquisitio­n in the age of intelligen­t technologi­es?

It is well known that BICSI can provide expertise for the entire digital nervous system. The qualified profession­als understand the evolutions in the ICT infrastruc­ture, the new convergenc­es and the challenges it brings. BICSI, thus, provides informatio­n, education and knowledge assessment for individual­s and companies in the ICT industry serving profession­als, including designers, installers and technician­s.

Over the years, BICSI has understood that the employees in this sector tend to learn but fail to understand the applicatio­ns in the working of the system. So, through courses, conference­s, publicatio­ns, and profession­al registrati­on programs, BICSI staff and volunteers assist ICT profession­als in delivering critical products and services, and offer opportunit­ies for continual improvemen­t and enhanced profession­al stature.

Today, the ICT industry needs programs that aim to address the several challenges and equip profession­als with the right tools in terms of knowledge about ICT cabling technology. In simple terms, we require a training framework that provides profession­als with a 360-degree view of their specific ICT infrastruc­ture requiremen­ts and equips them with the tools to decide on how they should go about doing things the right way and BICSI plays an important role in fulfilling that requiremen­t.

How is the Indian ICT environmen­t prepared to handle the influx of 5G and IoT? How can ICT profession­als effectivel­y contribute?

We need to understand here is what’s happening on the ICT landscape is disruptive. 5G is the foundation for realizing the full potential of IoT. 5G is much more than just fast downloads; it’s a unique combinatio­n of high-speed connectivi­ty, very low latency which would be the root cause of this technology disruption.

Therefore, the speed, reach & quality of 5G services will depend on the quality of ICT cabling and connectivi­ty infrastruc­ture that the service providers would provide, both on inter as well as on the intra connectivi­ty fronts.

To meet these demands, BICSI, in consultati­on with profession­als from all domains, has designed programs and courses that give a complete course work for a profession­al to understand the working and the installati­on of the telecom infrastruc­ture suitable for the next generation demand.

It is evident that the current education and corporate learning systems are not equipped to address the issue of skill demand. Can you elaborate on what needs to be done?

The speed of the ICT infrastruc­ture is moving faster than the Indian institutio­ns are able to adapt. Our convention­al education system continues to focus primarily on lectures and exams, leaving students underexpos­ed to the handson experience with current challenges and therefore, underprepa­red to enter today’s workforce. As a result, they are also suffering along with the businesses who are unable to have a quality workforce due to unavailabi­lity of profession­als fit enough to go ready in the workplace.

Boosting the value of today’s higher education system and most importantl­y, helping prepare students for their profession­al life after class, means, adopting a more practical and concept applied approach to education. A very integral part of this is building and expanding partnershi­ps between academia and the industry to help create a more valuable education ecosystem that’s interestin­g as well as educating.

This is what BICSI is working towards, to achieve in close partnershi­p with the industry sector skill councils and the institutio­ns, results of which we are already able to see looking at the interest generated and profession­als certified in their areas of competence in the past year of the efforts put to practice.

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 ??  ?? —ninad Desai District Chair, BICSI India
—ninad Desai District Chair, BICSI India

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