Vijay P. Bhatkar
Encyclopedia
Dr Vijay Pandurang Bhatkar (born 11 October 1946) is an IT
computer scientist
from India. He is best known as an architect of the PARAM
series of Supercomputer
s, GIST
multilingual technology and Education-To-Home http://www.eth.co.in mission. He is widely recognized for his noteworthy contributions in bringing ICT to the masses through a series of path-breaking initiatives. He is also credited with the creation of several national institutions, notably amongst them being the Centre for Development of Advanced Computing, – India’s national initiative in Supercomputing; the Electronics Research & Development Centre (ER&DC), Trivandrum – India’s largest R&D Centre in application oriented R&D in electronics; the ETH Research Laboratory, Pune for launching Education-To-Home mission; the International Institute of Information Technology I2IT, Pune – India’s largest Post-Graduate Institute for advanced education in IT; and the India International Multiversity (IIMv) – an educational initiative for promoting the concept of integral education.
. He obtained his Bachelor of Engineering degree from Nagpur University in 1965, his Master of Engineering in from M.S. University, Baroda, in 1968, and his Doctor of Philosophy degree in Engineering from the Indian Institute of Technology, Delhi IIT Delhi , in 1972.
. He was also a Member of several IT Task Forcesconstituted by the Prime Minister in 1998 to propel India as IT superpower. He was invited to address The Royal Society Royal society
in 2003. He led the Indian delegation to South Africa to formulate Indo-SA initiative in Advanced Computing. He is a member of the Indo-Russian Long Term Programme (ILTP) in Science & Technology. He has also been a member of Indo-Hungarian and Indo-French Joint Commissions.
Presently he is the Chairman of the ETH Research Lab with ‘Education To Home’ (ETH) Mission of bringing education to millions of homes transcending the barriers of geographies, economic levels and languages, using advances in information technologies. He is concurrently the Chairman of DishnetDSL Ltd., India’s leading national ISP which redefined the Internet industry and pioneered Broadband Internet in India.
Bhatkar is the founder Executive Director of the Centre for Development of Advanced Computing (C-DAC) which is India’s national initiative in Supercomputing where he led the development of PARAM Supercomputers, GIST language technology and C-DAC’s well-known Advanced Computing Training School (ACTS). Concurrently with C-DAC, he held the position of Advisor in the Department of Electronics (now Ministry of Information Technology), Government of India. He was the National Project Director of the UNDP assisted projects – Appropriate Automation Promotion Programme, Knowledge based Computer System Programme, and Fibre Optic System and Applications Promotion Programme.
Post Param propelled India into the select five nations who possessed this strategic technology. Based on PARAM series of supercomputers, Dr Bhatkar built the National Param Supercomputing Facility (NPSF) which is one of the largest supercomputing facilities of Asia. At NPSF, he led the development of several high-performance computing applications in collaboration with national as well as international user agencies.
Simultaneously, in a multilingual country of 1 billion people, where only 7 percent speak English, Bhatkar launched a mission for developing multilingual technology encompassing all languages of India. In this mission, the celebrated GIST multilingual technology was developed which made possible the use and co-existence of all Indian languages along with English on standard computers, dissolving the language barrier on computers once for all.
Faced with the challenge of creating a large number of software professionals in a shortest possible time, Bhatkar founded the Advanced Computing Training School (ACTS) in C-DAC which over the years has provided 10,000 software professionals to the IT industry and many of them have made both impact and name for themselves in US and other advanced countries.
Prior to this in 1987 he was Vice President of Tata Consultancy Services (TCS). which is India’s largest software enterprise. He was the Director of Electronics Research and Development Centre (ER&DC), Trivandrum from 1980-87 which, under his direction, emerged as India’s largest R&D Centre in electronics. At ER&DC, he led the development of several new products and systems leading to large-scale commercialization. Concurrently, he was the Executive Director of KELTRON, India’s first state electronics development corporation which inspired a chain of such state corporations in different states of India. At KELTRON, he implemented some of the largest projects in electronics and IT in the 80’s, such as computerization of Calcutta Metro, security systems for government, simulators for defence, and, most importantly, distributed computer control systems for large power grids, power plants and process industries of India.
For transforming education, he advented the concept of integral education and founded the India International Multiversity (IIMV) of which he is presently the Founder Chancellor. The IIMV is a multi-campus university founded on Indian knowledge system addressed to aspiring learners across the world Through IIMV, he is implementing several path-breaking projects relating to transformation of pilgrimage places into knowledge pilgrimage places through IT, and bringing IT to the masses through e-governance and e-services. He is a member of the International Advisory Committee of Amrita Vishwa Vidyapeetham.
Bhatkar also envisioned and created the International Institute of Information Technology (I2IT) for advanced education and research in IT. I2IT is planned as India’s largest high-end education institute with post-graduate education and research facilities for over 1000 students. I2IT was dedicated to the nation by the President of India on 28 May 2003. He is also a member of the Governing Board of Indian Institute of Information Technology and Management, Trivandrum promoted by Government of Kerala.
Bhatkar has authored / edited 8 books and over 80 research publications in supercomputing, artificial intelligence and distributed computer control, optimal control and variational theory. His contribution in nonlocal optimal control and nonlocal variational theory based on his doctoral research have been acclaimed and his books on distributed computer control and artificial intelligence published by Marcel Dekker, New York have been used as graduate level text books in the US and Indian universities. He has recently edited over 75 web-based tutorials in engineering for India International Multiversity. He has addressed several convocations of Indian universities and delivered keynote addresses in several national and international conferences and seminars.
Bhatkar is a Fellow of the Computer Society of India, Fellow of the Indian National Academy of Engineering, New Delhi, Fellow of the Maharashtra Academy of Science, Pune, Fellow of the Institution of Electronics and Telecommunication Engineers, Delhi, Senior Member of the IEEE, USA, Member of the New York Academy of Sciences, New York, and also several leading national and international professional societies and task forces, holding active positions in many of them.
He is a Fellow of the Association for Computing Machinery
(2009).
Ph.D. from IIT Delhi in 1972.
Internationally acknowledged research in Nonlocal Systems; Modelling, Simulation and Optimal Control. Research Monographs with Prof. DGB Edelen, Lehigh University, USA
Member of the core group of Electronics Commission which initiated the Electronics revolution in India. Setting Up of Appropriate Automation Promotion Laboratory (AAPL) for promoting right kind of automation in Indian process and manufacturing industries. Catalysis and promotion of automation in Indian industries from pneumatic control to modern distributed computer control systems.
Wide-scale introduction and promotion of microprocessor education in India
1980-1987
Director of Electronics Research & Development Centre (ER&DC) & Keltron, Trivandrum.
Indigenous development of electronic products & systems, several firsts in India, such as CTV, CCTVs, Traffic Control Systems, microprocessor based industrial Control Systems, Industrial drivers, Defence Simulators, Automation of large power plants & process industries states. Automation of Calcutta Metro.
ER&DC emerged as India’s largest centre for application oriented R&D in Electronics and KELTRON as India’s leading State Electronics Development Corporation to be emulated by other States of India ushering Electronics Revolution in India in the 80’s.
1988-1998
Launched Indian national initiative in Supercomputing. Creation of C-DAC. Design, Development and Delivery of PARAM 8000 in 1991 & PARAM 10000 in 1998. India becomes world’s third nation to develop supercomputers. PARAM Supercomputers exported to Russia, Singapore, Germany and Canada.
Development of GIST multilingual technology covering 16 major languages with 10 different scripts Language barrier on computers vanishes in India.
Launch of ACTS for fastest creation of IT professionals. Over 10000 professionals created for India’s IT industry in the 90s.
Creating Kerala Infotech Park in Trivandrum, one of the finest IT parks of India.
1998–present
Creation of Education-To-Home (ETH) Research Laboratory and subsequently Maharashtra Knowledge Corporation Limited (MKCL)
for bringing computer literacy & education to millions of learners transacting the barriers of distance, languages and economic levels.
Launch of DishnetDSL, which redefined the Internet industry and pioneered broadband revolution through DSL technology. Contributed to the development of world leading broadband technology to provide 10mbps connectivity to homes for triple play services covering voice, data, and video, at lowest per port cost.
Launch of International Institute of Information Technology (I2IT) which has emerged as India’s leading and largest post-graduate educational institute for Advanced IT education and research. I2IT goes international by setting up centres in Russia, Korea, Thailand, Indonesia, etc.
Launched India International Multiversity (IIMv) for integral education and transformational education. Initiated the mission of transforming India’s pilgrimage places into knowledge pilgrimage places. Contribution to bringing India’s spiritual & cultural heritage on Internet. Initiation of several projects for bringing the far-reaching impact of ICT to the masses
Dnyaneshwar Vidyapeeth
International Institute of Information Technology (I2IT)
Maharashtra Knowledge Corporation Ltd (MKCL)
Multiversity Pvt Ltd (Multiversity)
Knowledge Divine Information Technology Pvt Ltd (KNOW-IT)
Divinet Access Technologies Ltd (Divinet)
Centre for Development of Advanced Computing (C-DAC)
Indian Institute Information Technology and Management Kerala Ltd (IITM-K)
Electronics Research & Development Centre (ER&DC)
Appropriate Automation Promotion Laboratory ( APPL) of IPAG Electronics Commission
President VIJNANA BHARATI "Swadeshi Science Movement of Bharat" - http://www.vijnanabharati.org/
• 2003 Dataquest Lifetime Achievement Award (the highest award of Indian IT Industry)
Annasaheb Chirmule Memorial Award for Contributions to IT
• 2002 Visweswariya Memorial Award, Kolhapur
• 2001 Power Grid Corporation of India Ltd. (PGCIL) Award for Excellence in Information Technology
• 2000 Padmashree Award by Government of India (one of the highest civilian awards of Government of India)
Om Prakash Bhasin Foundation Award in Electronics & Information Technology
Priyadarshni Award for Contributions in the field of Information Technology
• 1999- 2000 Maharashtra Bhushan Award by Government of Maharashtra (the highest award conferred by Govt. of Maharashtra)
• 1999 Federation of Indian Chamber of Commerce & Industries (FICCI) Award for Excellence in Engineering & Technology
Lokmanya Tilak Award
• 1998 e-Biz Innovation Contest Award, Dubai Internet City (for best innovation amongst 1325 entries from 35 countries)
• 1997 Rotary Excellence Award
Pune’s Pride Award for Excellence in the World of Education
• 1995-96 H. K. Firodia Award for Life-time Achievements in Science & Technology
• 1995 Vividhlaxi Audyogik Samshodhan Vikas Kentra (VASVIK) Award
• 1994 Distinguished Alumni Award of Indian Institute of Technology, Delhi
• 1992 Electronics Man of the Year Award by Electronics Component Industries Association (ELCINA)
• 1983 Federation of Indian Chamber of Commerce & Industries (FICCI) Award to ER&DC for excellence in Research &Development in Electronics
Father (Late) Shri Pandurang Bhatkar (Bhausaheb Bhatkar)
Mother (Late) Shrimati Nirmalatai Bhatkar
Wife Lalit Bhatkar
Children Samhita Bhatkar Borah
Nachiketas Bhatkar
Taijasa Bhatkar
Date and Place of Birth 11 October 1946
Muramba, Maharashtra, India
Profession Engineer/ Leader/ Explorer/ Innovator/ Entrepreneur
Present position Chairman, ETH Research Lab
President VIJNANA BHARATI "Swadeshi Science Movement of Bharat" - http://www.vijnanabharati.org/
Academic Qualifications
Ph. D. – IIT, Delhi – 1972
M. E. – MSU, Baroda – 1969
B. E. – Nagpur University - 1965
Events germinate from nowhere and slowly grow into ironies. The software industry is a good example of this. The globe recognises and probably envies India’s pool of information technology talent. What many do not realize is the inequity in distribution of education and technology. In a country of a billion people only 7 per cent speak English and a mere 2.5 per cent know what modern methods communication are. The Internet is still a silhouette in the distance, despite India having a sizeable presence in the capital of computer science, the Silicon Valley. However, due to the sheer volume of the population, India’s 2.5 per cent software savvy people could fill a couple of European countries comfortably. India has always had that unbeatable ‘irony virus’.
Dr Vijay Bhatkar always fought this ‘virus’. He has done so by building knowledge bridges that beckon people to cross over to that bank where he stands – a place that is brimming with spiritual and scientific energies generated by self-reliance. Dr Bhatkar has tried to transform India’s traditionalism without hurting its essence. His views on the rationale behind touching feet of elders’ in India’s culture is one of striking simplicity:
“There is nothing to be ashamed of. Everyone should touch elders’ feet because the moment you bow before someone and surrender, that person cannot but bless you and also protect you in his or her own away.”
Indian culture, one that the younger generation is losing bit by bit, is philosophically demanding. Surrender is the biggest victory, for it requires a courageous mind. A mind that defeats anger and insecurity, tastes the spirit’s victory over the body. “These things cannot be mathematically proved, but intuitively understood,” Dr Bhatkar says. The experiment here is meditation in the most intimate and complex laboratory, the human body and mind.
For many in the West and the East this would sound unscientific. Precisely, this is what makes Dr Bhatkar different: a man of science who bows before what cannot be explained by laws and numbers. In keeping with India’s tradition, he has looked to help create an India as envisioned by gurus like Swami Vivekananda and Saint Dyaneshwar. And with such an approach logic has been taken to its highest state—intuition and illogic.
He once guided Dnyaneshwar Vidyapeeth as ex-vice chancellor and quit it long back.
Information technology
Information technology is the acquisition, processing, storage and dissemination of vocal, pictorial, textual and numerical information by a microelectronics-based combination of computing and telecommunications...
computer scientist
Computer scientist
A computer scientist is a scientist who has acquired knowledge of computer science, the study of the theoretical foundations of information and computation and their application in computer systems....
from India. He is best known as an architect of the PARAM
PARAM
PARAM is a series of supercomputers designed and assembled by the Centre for Development of Advanced Computing in Pune, India. The latest machine in the series is the PARAM Yuva.Param means supreme in Sanskrit.-History:...
series of Supercomputer
Supercomputer
A supercomputer is a computer at the frontline of current processing capacity, particularly speed of calculation.Supercomputers are used for highly calculation-intensive tasks such as problems including quantum physics, weather forecasting, climate research, molecular modeling A supercomputer is a...
s, GIST
GIST
Gist or GIST may refer to:*Essence, the central idea or main substance*GiST, or Generalized Search Tree, a flexible data structure for building search trees*Gist , a scientific graphics library written in the C programming language...
multilingual technology and Education-To-Home http://www.eth.co.in mission. He is widely recognized for his noteworthy contributions in bringing ICT to the masses through a series of path-breaking initiatives. He is also credited with the creation of several national institutions, notably amongst them being the Centre for Development of Advanced Computing, – India’s national initiative in Supercomputing; the Electronics Research & Development Centre (ER&DC), Trivandrum – India’s largest R&D Centre in application oriented R&D in electronics; the ETH Research Laboratory, Pune for launching Education-To-Home mission; the International Institute of Information Technology I2IT, Pune – India’s largest Post-Graduate Institute for advanced education in IT; and the India International Multiversity (IIMv) – an educational initiative for promoting the concept of integral education.
Biography and training
Bhatkar was born on 11 October 1946 at Muramba, Akola, MaharashtraMaharashtra
Maharashtra is a state located in India. It is the second most populous after Uttar Pradesh and third largest state by area in India...
. He obtained his Bachelor of Engineering degree from Nagpur University in 1965, his Master of Engineering in from M.S. University, Baroda, in 1968, and his Doctor of Philosophy degree in Engineering from the Indian Institute of Technology, Delhi IIT Delhi , in 1972.
Career
He has served as a Member of the Scientific Advisory Committee to the Cabinet of Government of India Government of IndiaGovernment of India
The Government of India, officially known as the Union Government, and also known as the Central Government, was established by the Constitution of India, and is the governing authority of the union of 28 states and seven union territories, collectively called the Republic of India...
. He was also a Member of several IT Task Forcesconstituted by the Prime Minister in 1998 to propel India as IT superpower. He was invited to address The Royal Society Royal society
Royal Society
The Royal Society of London for Improving Natural Knowledge, known simply as the Royal Society, is a learned society for science, and is possibly the oldest such society in existence. Founded in November 1660, it was granted a Royal Charter by King Charles II as the "Royal Society of London"...
in 2003. He led the Indian delegation to South Africa to formulate Indo-SA initiative in Advanced Computing. He is a member of the Indo-Russian Long Term Programme (ILTP) in Science & Technology. He has also been a member of Indo-Hungarian and Indo-French Joint Commissions.
Presently he is the Chairman of the ETH Research Lab with ‘Education To Home’ (ETH) Mission of bringing education to millions of homes transcending the barriers of geographies, economic levels and languages, using advances in information technologies. He is concurrently the Chairman of DishnetDSL Ltd., India’s leading national ISP which redefined the Internet industry and pioneered Broadband Internet in India.
Bhatkar is the founder Executive Director of the Centre for Development of Advanced Computing (C-DAC) which is India’s national initiative in Supercomputing where he led the development of PARAM Supercomputers, GIST language technology and C-DAC’s well-known Advanced Computing Training School (ACTS). Concurrently with C-DAC, he held the position of Advisor in the Department of Electronics (now Ministry of Information Technology), Government of India. He was the National Project Director of the UNDP assisted projects – Appropriate Automation Promotion Programme, Knowledge based Computer System Programme, and Fibre Optic System and Applications Promotion Programme.
Post Param propelled India into the select five nations who possessed this strategic technology. Based on PARAM series of supercomputers, Dr Bhatkar built the National Param Supercomputing Facility (NPSF) which is one of the largest supercomputing facilities of Asia. At NPSF, he led the development of several high-performance computing applications in collaboration with national as well as international user agencies.
Simultaneously, in a multilingual country of 1 billion people, where only 7 percent speak English, Bhatkar launched a mission for developing multilingual technology encompassing all languages of India. In this mission, the celebrated GIST multilingual technology was developed which made possible the use and co-existence of all Indian languages along with English on standard computers, dissolving the language barrier on computers once for all.
Faced with the challenge of creating a large number of software professionals in a shortest possible time, Bhatkar founded the Advanced Computing Training School (ACTS) in C-DAC which over the years has provided 10,000 software professionals to the IT industry and many of them have made both impact and name for themselves in US and other advanced countries.
Prior to this in 1987 he was Vice President of Tata Consultancy Services (TCS). which is India’s largest software enterprise. He was the Director of Electronics Research and Development Centre (ER&DC), Trivandrum from 1980-87 which, under his direction, emerged as India’s largest R&D Centre in electronics. At ER&DC, he led the development of several new products and systems leading to large-scale commercialization. Concurrently, he was the Executive Director of KELTRON, India’s first state electronics development corporation which inspired a chain of such state corporations in different states of India. At KELTRON, he implemented some of the largest projects in electronics and IT in the 80’s, such as computerization of Calcutta Metro, security systems for government, simulators for defence, and, most importantly, distributed computer control systems for large power grids, power plants and process industries of India.
For transforming education, he advented the concept of integral education and founded the India International Multiversity (IIMV) of which he is presently the Founder Chancellor. The IIMV is a multi-campus university founded on Indian knowledge system addressed to aspiring learners across the world Through IIMV, he is implementing several path-breaking projects relating to transformation of pilgrimage places into knowledge pilgrimage places through IT, and bringing IT to the masses through e-governance and e-services. He is a member of the International Advisory Committee of Amrita Vishwa Vidyapeetham.
Bhatkar also envisioned and created the International Institute of Information Technology (I2IT) for advanced education and research in IT. I2IT is planned as India’s largest high-end education institute with post-graduate education and research facilities for over 1000 students. I2IT was dedicated to the nation by the President of India on 28 May 2003. He is also a member of the Governing Board of Indian Institute of Information Technology and Management, Trivandrum promoted by Government of Kerala.
Bhatkar has authored / edited 8 books and over 80 research publications in supercomputing, artificial intelligence and distributed computer control, optimal control and variational theory. His contribution in nonlocal optimal control and nonlocal variational theory based on his doctoral research have been acclaimed and his books on distributed computer control and artificial intelligence published by Marcel Dekker, New York have been used as graduate level text books in the US and Indian universities. He has recently edited over 75 web-based tutorials in engineering for India International Multiversity. He has addressed several convocations of Indian universities and delivered keynote addresses in several national and international conferences and seminars.
Bhatkar is a Fellow of the Computer Society of India, Fellow of the Indian National Academy of Engineering, New Delhi, Fellow of the Maharashtra Academy of Science, Pune, Fellow of the Institution of Electronics and Telecommunication Engineers, Delhi, Senior Member of the IEEE, USA, Member of the New York Academy of Sciences, New York, and also several leading national and international professional societies and task forces, holding active positions in many of them.
Recognition
For his contributions to IT in India, he was conferred with the PADMASHRI award in 2000, one of the highest civilian recognitions by the Government of India, the Maharashtra Bhushan Award 1999-2000, the highest recognition of Government of Maharashtra. He is also a recipient of several prestigious national awards, notably amongst them being, Power Grid Corporation of India Ltd., (PGCIL) Award 2001 for Excellence in Information Technology, Om Prakash Bhasin Foundation Award 2000 in Electronics & Information Technology, Priyadarshni Award 2000 for contributions in the field of Information Technology, Federation of Indian Chamber of Commerce and Industries (FICCI) Award for Excellence in Engineering & Technology 1999, Lokmanya Tilak Award 1999, Rotary Excellence Award 1997, Pune’s Pride Award for Excellence in the World of Education for the year 1996, the H.K. Firodia Award for life-time achievements in science and technology 1995-96, Distinguished Alumni Award 1994 of Indian Institute of Technology, Delhi, Vivdhlaxi Audyogik Samshodhan Vikas Kendra (VASVIK) Award for 1993, Ramlal Wadhwa Gold Medal Award 1992 by the Institution of Electronics and Telecommunication Engineers (IETE), , National Research Development Corporation (NRDC) Award (1984–85), Electronics Man of the Year 1992 Award by Electronics Component Industries Association (ELCINA)), Federation of Indian Chamber of Commerce and Industry (FICCI) Award to ER&DC for excellence in Research & Development in Electronics (1983), and Gold Medal Award of Indian Geo-technical Society (1976). He is also conferred with several social and spiritual awards, amongst them being Saraswati Award, Vidarbha Gaurav Award, Pune Citadel Award, Vidarbha Bhushan Award, Punya-Bhushan Award, and Gratitude Award.He is a Fellow of the Association for Computing Machinery
Association for Computing Machinery
The Association for Computing Machinery is a learned society for computing. It was founded in 1947 as the world's first scientific and educational computing society. Its membership is more than 92,000 as of 2009...
(2009).
Milestones
1972-1980Ph.D. from IIT Delhi in 1972.
Internationally acknowledged research in Nonlocal Systems; Modelling, Simulation and Optimal Control. Research Monographs with Prof. DGB Edelen, Lehigh University, USA
Member of the core group of Electronics Commission which initiated the Electronics revolution in India. Setting Up of Appropriate Automation Promotion Laboratory (AAPL) for promoting right kind of automation in Indian process and manufacturing industries. Catalysis and promotion of automation in Indian industries from pneumatic control to modern distributed computer control systems.
Wide-scale introduction and promotion of microprocessor education in India
1980-1987
Director of Electronics Research & Development Centre (ER&DC) & Keltron, Trivandrum.
Indigenous development of electronic products & systems, several firsts in India, such as CTV, CCTVs, Traffic Control Systems, microprocessor based industrial Control Systems, Industrial drivers, Defence Simulators, Automation of large power plants & process industries states. Automation of Calcutta Metro.
ER&DC emerged as India’s largest centre for application oriented R&D in Electronics and KELTRON as India’s leading State Electronics Development Corporation to be emulated by other States of India ushering Electronics Revolution in India in the 80’s.
1988-1998
Launched Indian national initiative in Supercomputing. Creation of C-DAC. Design, Development and Delivery of PARAM 8000 in 1991 & PARAM 10000 in 1998. India becomes world’s third nation to develop supercomputers. PARAM Supercomputers exported to Russia, Singapore, Germany and Canada.
Development of GIST multilingual technology covering 16 major languages with 10 different scripts Language barrier on computers vanishes in India.
Launch of ACTS for fastest creation of IT professionals. Over 10000 professionals created for India’s IT industry in the 90s.
Creating Kerala Infotech Park in Trivandrum, one of the finest IT parks of India.
1998–present
Creation of Education-To-Home (ETH) Research Laboratory and subsequently Maharashtra Knowledge Corporation Limited (MKCL)
Maharashtra Knowledge Corporation Limited (MKCL)
Maharashtra Knowledge Corporation Limited is a public limited company promoted by the Department of Higher and Technical Education, Government of Maharashtra, India...
for bringing computer literacy & education to millions of learners transacting the barriers of distance, languages and economic levels.
Launch of DishnetDSL, which redefined the Internet industry and pioneered broadband revolution through DSL technology. Contributed to the development of world leading broadband technology to provide 10mbps connectivity to homes for triple play services covering voice, data, and video, at lowest per port cost.
Launch of International Institute of Information Technology (I2IT) which has emerged as India’s leading and largest post-graduate educational institute for Advanced IT education and research. I2IT goes international by setting up centres in Russia, Korea, Thailand, Indonesia, etc.
Launched India International Multiversity (IIMv) for integral education and transformational education. Initiated the mission of transforming India’s pilgrimage places into knowledge pilgrimage places. Contribution to bringing India’s spiritual & cultural heritage on Internet. Initiation of several projects for bringing the far-reaching impact of ICT to the masses
Institutions built
ETH Research Lab, DishnetDSL Ltd (DDSL)Dnyaneshwar Vidyapeeth
International Institute of Information Technology (I2IT)
Maharashtra Knowledge Corporation Ltd (MKCL)
Multiversity Pvt Ltd (Multiversity)
Knowledge Divine Information Technology Pvt Ltd (KNOW-IT)
Divinet Access Technologies Ltd (Divinet)
Centre for Development of Advanced Computing (C-DAC)
Indian Institute Information Technology and Management Kerala Ltd (IITM-K)
Electronics Research & Development Centre (ER&DC)
Appropriate Automation Promotion Laboratory ( APPL) of IPAG Electronics Commission
President VIJNANA BHARATI "Swadeshi Science Movement of Bharat" - http://www.vijnanabharati.org/
Awards and reviews
ICT and S&T Awards• 2003 Dataquest Lifetime Achievement Award (the highest award of Indian IT Industry)
Annasaheb Chirmule Memorial Award for Contributions to IT
• 2002 Visweswariya Memorial Award, Kolhapur
• 2001 Power Grid Corporation of India Ltd. (PGCIL) Award for Excellence in Information Technology
• 2000 Padmashree Award by Government of India (one of the highest civilian awards of Government of India)
Om Prakash Bhasin Foundation Award in Electronics & Information Technology
Priyadarshni Award for Contributions in the field of Information Technology
• 1999- 2000 Maharashtra Bhushan Award by Government of Maharashtra (the highest award conferred by Govt. of Maharashtra)
• 1999 Federation of Indian Chamber of Commerce & Industries (FICCI) Award for Excellence in Engineering & Technology
Lokmanya Tilak Award
• 1998 e-Biz Innovation Contest Award, Dubai Internet City (for best innovation amongst 1325 entries from 35 countries)
• 1997 Rotary Excellence Award
Pune’s Pride Award for Excellence in the World of Education
• 1995-96 H. K. Firodia Award for Life-time Achievements in Science & Technology
• 1995 Vividhlaxi Audyogik Samshodhan Vikas Kentra (VASVIK) Award
• 1994 Distinguished Alumni Award of Indian Institute of Technology, Delhi
• 1992 Electronics Man of the Year Award by Electronics Component Industries Association (ELCINA)
• 1983 Federation of Indian Chamber of Commerce & Industries (FICCI) Award to ER&DC for excellence in Research &Development in Electronics
Basic information
Name Dr. Vijay P. BhatkarFather (Late) Shri Pandurang Bhatkar (Bhausaheb Bhatkar)
Mother (Late) Shrimati Nirmalatai Bhatkar
Wife Lalit Bhatkar
Children Samhita Bhatkar Borah
Nachiketas Bhatkar
Taijasa Bhatkar
Date and Place of Birth 11 October 1946
Muramba, Maharashtra, India
Profession Engineer/ Leader/ Explorer/ Innovator/ Entrepreneur
Present position Chairman, ETH Research Lab
President VIJNANA BHARATI "Swadeshi Science Movement of Bharat" - http://www.vijnanabharati.org/
Academic Qualifications
Ph. D. – IIT, Delhi – 1972
M. E. – MSU, Baroda – 1969
B. E. – Nagpur University - 1965
Overall assessment
In India statistics never tell the full story.Events germinate from nowhere and slowly grow into ironies. The software industry is a good example of this. The globe recognises and probably envies India’s pool of information technology talent. What many do not realize is the inequity in distribution of education and technology. In a country of a billion people only 7 per cent speak English and a mere 2.5 per cent know what modern methods communication are. The Internet is still a silhouette in the distance, despite India having a sizeable presence in the capital of computer science, the Silicon Valley. However, due to the sheer volume of the population, India’s 2.5 per cent software savvy people could fill a couple of European countries comfortably. India has always had that unbeatable ‘irony virus’.
Dr Vijay Bhatkar always fought this ‘virus’. He has done so by building knowledge bridges that beckon people to cross over to that bank where he stands – a place that is brimming with spiritual and scientific energies generated by self-reliance. Dr Bhatkar has tried to transform India’s traditionalism without hurting its essence. His views on the rationale behind touching feet of elders’ in India’s culture is one of striking simplicity:
“There is nothing to be ashamed of. Everyone should touch elders’ feet because the moment you bow before someone and surrender, that person cannot but bless you and also protect you in his or her own away.”
Indian culture, one that the younger generation is losing bit by bit, is philosophically demanding. Surrender is the biggest victory, for it requires a courageous mind. A mind that defeats anger and insecurity, tastes the spirit’s victory over the body. “These things cannot be mathematically proved, but intuitively understood,” Dr Bhatkar says. The experiment here is meditation in the most intimate and complex laboratory, the human body and mind.
For many in the West and the East this would sound unscientific. Precisely, this is what makes Dr Bhatkar different: a man of science who bows before what cannot be explained by laws and numbers. In keeping with India’s tradition, he has looked to help create an India as envisioned by gurus like Swami Vivekananda and Saint Dyaneshwar. And with such an approach logic has been taken to its highest state—intuition and illogic.
He once guided Dnyaneshwar Vidyapeeth as ex-vice chancellor and quit it long back.