Business Ideas, Innovation, Motivations, News

The world’s most efficient air conditioner

What’s more disruptive than a hybrid of cooler and air conditioner that comes at a tenth of an AC’s running cost? This means electricity consumption of only 250 Watts per hour, compared to an air conditioner that consumes 2,400 Watts per hour. So if you were paying Rs 5,000 per month (air conditioner), you will now pay around Rs 500. And wait, it’s environment-friendly too, as it is possibly the world’s only cooling product that uses the refrigeration cycle but does not emit heat in the environment. If your air conditioner breaks give Blake & Sons Heating and Air a call.

Vaayu Founders Pranav and Dr Priyanka Mokshmar
Vaayu Founders Pranav and Dr Priyanka Mokshmar

This miraculous cooling technology is called Vaayu, developed by Pranav Mokshmar from Indore and has been backed by Madhya Pradesh Chief Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan and Rajasthan Chief Minister Vasundhara Raje Scindia. After almost five years of trials and errors, patenting process and funding efforts, Vaayu began operations in October 2014.

Vaayu Hybrid Chillers – a patented technology – acquired a funding of Rs 1 crore under collateral-free CGTMSE scheme of the State government of Madhya Pradesh through Corporation Bank, Indore. The startup has its manufacturing unit, constituting two plants, at Sanwer Road in Indore. The product has been tested for more than 100 units and the company is getting bulk orders from companies that care about environment and cost-saving. It has reached six States – Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Maharashtra, Delhi, Haryana and Uttarakhand, through its appointed dealers and distributors. These dealers are selling Vaayu to retail customers.

Vaayu Hybrid Chiller
Vaayu Hybrid Chiller

Too good to be true?

Disbelief was a common reaction the founders – Pranav and Priyanka – received each time they made a presentation about Vaayu. “We were once presenting before a team of scientists and science professors and most of them said that our product defied all the laws of thermodynamics,” quips Priyanka. This has caused such a stir that even companies in America are bloggin about it (check Breckinridge Heating and Cooling in Louisville, KY), the AC repair Augusta GA company has made their intention to back this up clear.

So how does Vaayu work exactly? “As soon as Vaayu chiller is switched on, the compressor starts and the refrigerator flows in the cooling coil to chill the water. This water reaches the pads of the machine by pumps. The hot air outside comes in contact with the chilled water and the molecules present in the hot air lose temperature. The thermostat helps to put the compressors on and off as per the need of the water temperature to be maintained and prevents overheating. The condenser cools down the refrigerant and helps in dehumidification of excess RH to control the humidity level. The chilled air is finally pushed inside the area where the unit is installed through a fan of the machine,” informs Pranav.

In short, Vaayu doesn’t make you shiver like an AC but basically brings the temperature to a legitimate level and controls the humidity so that the environment becomes pleasant.

Vaayu chillers look like coolers and ACs so to make them workable in terms of installation and to meet customer needs. “We have recently launched a revolutionary product, VAAYU MIG 24, which has a capacity of cooling 1,000 sq.ft., and consumes only 800 Watts,” says Pranav.

Vaayu MIG24 Model
Vaayu MIG24 Model

The company intends on expanding to ten more States in the financial year 2016-17. “In the next five years, we plan to go pan India and also start exports, as we have received enquiries from Mexico, UAE , Africa etc. We are planning this expansion through sales returns along with expecting to get some funding through VCs,” he adds.

A power couple

Priyanka, Pranav’s wife, did most of her post-graduation studies after marriage. Pranav – a commerce graduate with a diploma in HVAC (heating, venting and air-conditioning) – worked as a product manager in multinational companies such as Carrier, Samsung and LG for almost 14 years. But being a technology-curious person, he started his own venture of commercial AC sales and service in 2008, and commissioned many noted projects in Madhya Pradesh. Priyanka, in the meantime, acquired an MBA in Marketing (Prestige Institute Indore) and PhD in Management (Devi Ahilya University) and apart from writing research papers, had begun giving lectures in various institutes in Indore.

“Initially, Pranav’s office used to be at home, so during the summer of 2010, his father pulled him up for heavy electricity bills, since his team used ACs. So one, day he got a few components of AC and they all began working with coolers. When I asked, I was told they were trying to see if a compressor could be fitted into a cooler. I seriously thought this must be one of his whims since he loved experimenting with electronic appliances and machines. Little did I know back then that he would end up inventing a technology we would patent later,” says Priyanka.

Team Vaayu
Team Vaayu

Pranav points out the importance of marketing the product. “Twice we had a choice between getting a lot of money from investors and selling out the patent. However, becoming millionaires just like that wasn’t exactly our goal,” shares Pranav.

Sometimes, the couple  find it hard to come to terms with the fact that they have come this far. “But then we remind ourselves of what late Dhirubhai Ambani had said, ‘Think big, think fast and think ahead. Ideas are no one’ s monopoly’,” says Priyanka.

Vaayu recently won the Mega Launchpad – an event co-sponsored by YourStory Media. And their latest award is the Skoch Order of Merit and Skoch Best SME of India Award at the Constitution Club of India in Mumbai held recently. In addition, they are one of the top five startups chosen by the Government of Madhya Pradesh for the Prime Minister’s dream project ‘Start up India Stand Up India’.

http://yourstory.com/2016/03/vaayu-hybrid-chiller/

Business Ideas, Innovation, Social Entrepreneurship

Edible Cutlery

TheBetterIndia

India Innovates Episode 4 – Edible Cutlery
Eat with it and then Eat it!
This edible cutlery is a perfect alternative to harmful cutlery, it is not only environmentally safe but also enriched with nutritious ingredients.

Click here to see the Video
Email: info@bakeys.com or bakeys.narayana@gmail.com
Web: http://www.bakeys.com/
Order: http://www.bakeys.com/order.html
Visit Bakeys on FB
Marico Innovation Foundation Black Ticket Films

 

 

Innovation, People / Stories, Social Entrepreneurship

Natural agriculture

Natural agriculture: The man behind ‘zero-budget spiritual farming’

 

Padma awardee believes there’s much to learn from ancient Indian cultivation techniques

Jiwamrita, Subhash Palekar, zero budget farming, zero budget spiritual farming, Subhash Palekar jiwamrita, indian agricultural techniques, india news, latest news, maharashtra news

Subhash Palekar demonstrates the preparation of ‘Jiwamrita’ formulation.

 

…..“The farmer needs to apply to the crop a dose of Jiwamrita — a fermented solution containing 200 litres water, 5-10 litres cow urine, 10 kg dung, 1 kg each of gur (jaggery) and besan (gram flour), and a handful of soil from the farm bund — for every acre. The other important thing is to spread a carpet of harvested crop residue between crop rows, which helps to absorb moisture from the atmosphere and also prevents emergence of weeds,” explains Palekar.
According to him, Jiwamrita basically nurtures thousands of bacteria essential for healthy crop growth. The urine and dung used in the formulation, he insists, should be from indigenous cattle: “one desi cow can nourish 30 acres”……

 

Click for more information

 

Courtesy : K F Keravala

 

Business Ideas, Innovation, News, People / Stories, Technology

Shiva Ayyadurai an Indian-American scientist invented Email when he was just 14.

The 14 Year Old Indian Boy Who Invented Email turned 52 on Dec 2nd 2015. But how many of us know that, Shiva Ayyadurai an Indian-American scientist invented Email when he was just 14.

Ayyadurai was born to a Tamil Family in Bombay. At the age of seven, he left with his family to live in the US. In 1978, aged 14, he developed a full-scale emulation of the interoffice mail system which he called “E-mail”. It replicated all the functions of the interoffice mail system: Inbox, Outbox, Folders, Memo, Attachments, Address Book, etc. These features are now familiar parts of every email system.

Studying at Livingston High School in New Jersey, Ayyadurai began his work on the email system for the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey. He closely observed that the desktop of each secretary, in addition to the typewriter, had an Inbox, Outbox, Drafts, Carbon Copy Paper, Folders, Address Book, Paper Clips (for attachments), etc, which they used each day to create and process incoming and outgoing mail.

Then he conceived an electronic version of this system. He created a computer programme of over 50,000 lines of code, which electronically replicated all the features of the interoffice mail system. On August 30, 1982, the US government officially recognized Ayyadurai as the inventor of email by awarding him the first US Copyright for Email for his 1978 invention. Yet his name is nowhere in modern history of computer science. Whoever claims the invention, Ayyadurai will remain the father of E-mail. Hope he gets the name in history he deserves.

Deva Bhatt added 4 new photos.

 

Deva Bhatt's photo.
Deva Bhatt's photo.Deva Bhatt's photo.
Deva Bhatt's photo.

 

 

Innovation

Forget Wi-Fi. Meet the new Li-Fi Internet

What if we could use existing technologies to provide Internet access to the more than 4 billion people living in places where the infrastructure can’t support it? Using off-the-shelf LEDs and solar cells, Harald Haas and his team have pioneered a new technology that transmits data using light, and it may just be the key to bridging the digital divide. Take a look at what the future of the Internet could look like.

Harald Haas

 

Business Ideas, Innovation, Mentoring, Motivations, People / Stories, Social Entrepreneurship

The blind CEO who built a 50 crore company

December 22, 2015 09:12 IST

 

Srikanth Bolla is standing tall living by his conviction that if the “world looks at me and says, ‘Srikanth, you can do nothing,’ I look back at the world and say ‘I can do anything’.”

Srikanth Bolla

When he was born, neighbours in the village suggested that his parents smother him.

It was better than the pain they would have to go through their lifetime, some said.

He is a “useless” baby without eyes… being born blind is a sin, others added.

Twenty-three years later, Srikanth Bolla (pictured left) is standing tall living by his conviction that if the “world looks at me and says, ‘Srikanth, you can do nothing,’ I look back at the world and say ‘I can do anything’.”

Srikanth is the CEO of Hyderabad-based Bollant Industries, an organisation that employs uneducated disabled employees to manufacture eco-friendly, disposable consumer packaging solutions, which is worth Rs 50 crores.

He considers himself the luckiest man alive, not because he is now a millionaire, but because his uneducated parents, who earned Rs 20,000 a year, did not heed any of the ‘advice’ they received and raised him with love and affection.

“They are the richest people I know,” says Srikanth.

Underdog success story : Click here to continue reading… 

 

Innovation

Pruthvi – the Intelligent Innovation

A Bengaluru based startup called Saankhya Labs has cracked the code for making the Modi’s government much ambitious project ‘ Digital India’, a reality. They have recognised that in order to make the project successful, they will first have start with the country’s rural population.

In order to convert India into an Internet haven, the startup has designed a postage stamp sized chip, called Pruthvi. The tiny chip holds the potential to power a system which makes use of television’s wasted spectrum bandwidth or White Spaces— to beam internet to a number of rural households.

If successful, with Pruthvi, the Benagluru based startup might be able to beat Silicon Valley heavyweights like Facebook, Google and Microsoft.

Notably in 2013, Google, under its ambitious Project Loon, has tested giant balloons that beams Internet to earth below it which company claims could bring web-surfing to rural and remote corners of the world.

Facebook, on other hand, had recently launched Aquila – a solar powered unmanned plane that beams down internet connectivity while in the sky to provide the luxury of Internet to even the remotest of the remote parts of the world, as part of Facebook’s Internet.org effort.

Recent times have seen these big corporations launching various programs in order to boost and support the Indian government’s Digital India initiative.

Saankhya Labs has gone one step ahead of Google and Facebook by successfully developing a chip which it has named – Pruthvi. This Pruthvi-chip powered system called Meghdoot can utilise the existing TV White Space bandwidth available in the country to provide wireless broadband to remote, rural areas.

TV White Spaces is a term technically used to define the unused spectrum (50 – 860 MHz) between active TV channels that are usually used for over-the-air transmission using rooftop antennas and TV towers. In India, this is mainly done by Prasar Bharti.

According to the company, TV White Space Communications is the most preferred wireless alternative for long distance communication. A single base station can reach households that are as far away as 10km – 30km depending on antenna height.

A single 8 MHz channel can provide a data rate of 30 Mbps which can be shared by about 15 users (2 Mbps bandwidth per user) simultaneously. As the number of users increase, additional base stations with directional antennas can be used or more frequencies can be assigned. Additional bandwidth per user can be configured by software. In the future, channel bonding/aggregation techniques will be used to increase the data speed beyond 30 Mbps or to increase the number of users that can be served by one base station. The time to put up the TV White Space network is also shorter compared to other options.

(Left) Antennae with customer premises equipment(Right)SLB802ODU is a White Space Base Station Platform

Left – Antennae with customer premises equipment
Right – Saankhya White Space Base Station Platform

Since the Meghdoot product line matches the Wi-FAR standard, The company is also contemplating conducting trials in the US, the Philippines and Singapore along with a few partners.

The Meghdoot product consists of two things, a base station and a user-side modem that makes use of the TV White Space spectrum from 400 to 800MHz in order to provide Wireless Rural Broadband.

Table comparing the various wireless networks.

Table comparing the various wireless networks.

When choosing the best indoor tv antenna keep these things in mind. By not requiring the line-of-sight, the technology ensures longer range, and can serve up to a radius of 10-15km depending on the transmit power and antenna tower height. The range can further be increased with the help of more taller and powerful antennas. Whole Pruthvi and customer base platform has low operative cost comparing to other internet providing platform such WiFi, 3G and what has been tested by facebook or Google.

Saankhya Labs is founded in the year 2007 by Parag Naik, Hemant Mallapur and Vishwakumara Kayargadde, is currently gearing up to conduct trails all across the country. It has collaborated with esteemed Indian institutions like IIT-Hyderabad, IIT-Delhi and IIT-Bombay for the same. Further, there are also in the midst of discussions with technology giant, Microsoft to carry out field trials at Srikakulam in Andhra Pradesh.

She is a fun loving girl who’s always scouting for innovative startups and fun entrepreneurs to write about. When not writing, you can find her perched in the corner of her room with her laptop running a serial marathon of her favorite sitcoms.

saankhya_puthvi

Innovation, Motivations

A breakthrough new kind of wireless Internet

What if we could use existing technologies to provide Internet access to the more than 4 billion people living in places where the infrastructure can’t support it? Using off-the-shelf LEDs and solar cells, Harald Haas and his team have pioneered a new technology that transmits data using light, and it may just be the key to bridging the digital divide. Take a look at what the future of the Internet could look like.

Business Ideas, Innovation, People / Stories

26 Innovative Ideas By School Students

A young mind is the sharpest mind. It learns quick and acts quicker. The education system today focuses on books and rote-learning, but times are changing as these young geniuses, who chose to take a different path, have proved. They have picked machines over books and ideas over words.

The IGNITE competition held by National Innovation Foundation – India is a platform that is giving these young minds a place to experiment and innovate, and come up with something extra ordinary. Having started with receiving less than 1,000 entries five years ago, the competition now receives over 20,000 entries from 301 districts in India.

These 26 interesting and impressive innovations by students of various schools across India are worth knowing and applauding-

Click here for the inovative ideas

Courtest : Cyrus Contractor