
[book excerpt]
"... I had come to Bangalore, India's Silicon Valley, on my own Columbus-like journey of exploration. Columbus sailed with the Nina, the Pinta, and the Santa Maria in an effort to discover a shorter, more direct route to India by heading west, across the Atlantic, on what he presumed to be an open sea route to the East Indies-rather than going south and east around Africa, as Portuguese explorers of his day were trying to do. India and the magical Spice Islands of the East were famed at the time for their gold, pearls, gems, and silk-a source of untold riches. Finding this shortcut by sea to India, at a time when the Muslim powers of the day had blocked the overland routes from Europe, was a way for both Columbus and the Spanish monarchy to become wealthy and powerful.When Columbus set sail, he apparently assumed the Earth was round, which was why he was convinced that he could get to India by going west. He miscalculated the distance, though. He also did not anticipate running into a landmass before he reached the East Indies. Nevertheless, he called the aboriginal peoples he encountered in the new world "Indians." Returning home,
though, Columbus was able to tell his patrons, King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella, that although he never did find India, he could confirm that the world was indeed round.
I set out for India by going due east, via Frankfurt. I had Lufthansa business class. I knew exactly which direction I was going thanks to the GPS map displayed on the screen that popped out of the armrest of my airline seat. I landed safely and on schedule. I too encountered people called Indians. I too was searching for the source of India's riches. Columbus was searching for hardware-precious metals, silk, and spices-the source of wealth in his day. I was searching for software, brainpower, complex algorithms, knowledge workers, call centers, transmission protocols, breakthroughs in optical engineering-the sources of wealth in our day. Columbus was happy to make the Indians he met his slaves, a pool of free manual labor. I just wanted to understand why the Indians I met were taking our work, why they had become such an important pool for the outsourcing of service and information technology work from America and other industrialized countries. Columbus had more than one hundred men on his three ships; I had a small crew from the Discovery Times channel that fit comfortably into two banged-up vans, with Indian drivers who drove barefoot. When I set sail, so to speak, I too assumed that the world was round, but what I encountered in the real India profoundly shook my faith in that notion. Columbus accidentally ran into America but thought he had discovered part of India. I actually found India and thought many of the people I met there were Americans. Some had actually taken American names, and others were doing great imitations of American accents at call centers and American business techniques at software labs. Columbus reported to his king and queen that the world was round, and he went down in history as the man who first made this discovery. I returned home and shared my discovery only with my wife, and only in a whisper.
"Honey," I confided, "I think the world is flat." "
Welcome back ya Diaa :D
ReplyDeleteNice one as always but first plz change the background colour, the black font is hardly readable on a brown background.
So u got my attention once i saw "Bangalore", one of my dream cities,
all what i can say that they r really so smart in India, they r leading with the power of human resources.
We nearly have the same resources, hope we can make it someday.
What i can't get is what does he mean by "I think the world is flat."?
1- To be honest, this is actually the first time I hear of a city called "Banglore" ... my bad :)
ReplyDelete2- I hope we can make it too, but it's gonna take time and effort and "change", I agree we have "some" very good minds that are willing to work and make that change but I doubt they're as many as those in India, waiting for that "someday" :D
3- What he means by a "Flat World" is that companies in countries like India, China and Singapore are no longer technologically "very far" from companies in America and Europe and -in his words- "the play ground is leveled" and that some of the work done int the USA - accounting for example- is already being outsourced to India.
I recommend this book to anyone who's about to wrestle their way into the world of Business, read it ya nour if you have time, you'll like it, and thank you very much for your comment :)