Karnataka, IBM sign MoU to promote e-learning initiative
By Our Convergence Bureau | 08 May 2003
Bangalore:
The
Karnataka state government and IBM India (www.ibm.com)
have signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) in a move
to advance e-learning initiative within the state based
on open-source technology. The e-learning platform will
be based on the principles of cost-effective technologies
and software as well as hardware neutral strategies.
Under the MoU, IBM will develop an e-learning platform for BITES (Board for IT Education Standards) for higher technical educational institutions in Karnataka. IBM will participate, along with BITES and IITB, Hubli, in the creation of an IBM centre of excellence in Hubli, devoted to the development of open-source software.
The MoU was signed by Frank Luksic, country executive, software group and developer relations, IBM India, and Vivek Kulkarni, secretary of IT and biotechnology, Karnataka state, Karnataka Chief Minister S M Krishna, Steve Mills, senior vice-president and group executive, software group, IBM Corporation and Abraham Thomas, managing director, IBM India.
Says
Mills: "Customers now expect their technology infrastructure
and solutions to work with hardware, software and solutions
from multiple vendors, bringing to an end the era of proprietary
systems. Industry and governments will now cooperate closely
to create innovative and reusable solutions through open
source software.
"IBM has the global expertise in providing e-learning services and setting up e-learning infrastructure. With this initiative we will leverage local talent through educational programmes and bring existing syllabus, faculty and students at par with the emerging technologies in IT. The e-learning platform with the Karnataka government will create one such eco-system and develop educational institutions in the state as centres of excellence."
Says Krishna: "I am pleased that IBM is creating a centre of excellence in Hubli, which will help develop the north Karnataka region. A key success factor of this initiative will be the close collaboration between IBM, academia and the education sector. I can proudly say that my government is the only state government to have taken such a major step."
Says
Kulkarni: "The problem faced by the industry today
in deploying new technologies is the paucity of skills
and talent. The MoU addresses this concern and will enable
knowledge sharing between BITES and IBM, where IBM will
share its expertise in providing e-learning services and
in setting up e-learning infrastructure thereby energising
local talent and enabling it to capitalise on the emerging
trends linked to open systems in IT products and service
operations."
The e-learning portal will entail e-learning content, faculty training, mentoring of students and application developments. The courseware will be based on Linux and Eclipse OSS and work on development of technologies like Middleware Components, Device Drivers, and Real Time Applications.
Latest articles
Featured articles
Artemis II and the economic outlook for lunar infrastructure
By Axel Miller | 01 Apr 2026
Artemis II will test deep-space systems and support future lunar missions, shaping the next phase of the global space economy.
Synthetic diplomacy: The $50 billion mirage and the new era of market-moving deepfakes
By Cygnus | 30 Mar 2026
Synthetic diplomacy shows how deepfakes could trigger market volatility, highlighting the growing need for verification in global financial systems.
AI war shifts gears: chips, drones reshape global power
By Cygnus | 27 Mar 2026
AI competition is shifting as chips, drones and supply chains reshape global power, impacting tech, defense and business strategies.
Trump’s Iran strike delay lifts markets, but risks remain elevated
By Axel Miller | 24 Mar 2026
Trump’s Iran strike delay eased market fears, sending oil lower and lifting Sensex. Risks remain as geopolitical tensions continue.
The rise of the ‘ghost executive’: how autonomous AI agents are entering the C-suite
By Cygnus | 17 Mar 2026
Autonomous AI agents are influencing business decisions and reshaping leadership structures as companies adopt agentic AI systems in 2026.
The sky is closing: The end of the global crossroads
By Axel Miller | 16 Mar 2026
Middle East airspace disruptions are forcing airlines to reroute global flights, raising costs and reshaping aviation networks in 2026.
Living in the “New Gulf”: how conflict is reshaping cities and infrastructure
By Cygnus | 16 Mar 2026
Gulf states are redesigning infrastructure, air defenses and aviation networks as regional tensions reshape urban resilience strategies.
The Petro-Tech Pivot: Why Your Next Phone Is Built on Shifting Sands
By Cygnus | 12 Mar 2026
Rising crude prices are reshaping electronics manufacturing as petrochemical costs drive pressure across the global tech supply chain.
Hardened compute: The rise of the data bunker
By Axel Miller | 11 Mar 2026
Explore how AI demand and geopolitical risk are driving investment in fortified data centers worldwide.


