Tag: Semiconductors

  • From Coders to Chip Designers: India’s RISC-V Revolution

    India has given the world millions of software developers who power global apps. But the processors running all that code are designed and controlled abroad – mostly by the United States or China. The code may be ours, but the platform it runs on is someone else’s. Whether it’s Intel’s x86 or an ARM-based chip, the design and control lie outside India. And it’s not just phones or laptops – everything from EVs to defense systems and AI runs on processors. Without owning processor technology, India’s digital power remains incomplete.

    Why Software Alone Isn’t Enough

    Relying on software prowess while importing critical hardware is a strategic weakness. Code without hardware control is like building on someone else’s land. If the underlying chips have backdoors or export restrictions, our software advantage can vanish overnight. True tech independence means owning the full stack – both the code and the silicon. When India’s applications run on foreign chips, we are playing by their rules. This dependence limits innovation and leaves us vulnerable to supply shocks and geopolitical pressure. Software success means little if we lack hardware sovereignty.

    US and China: The Chip Power Play

    The United States has led the tech world for decades largely because its homegrown processor giants like Intel dominated microprocessors, allowing it to dictate standards and drive computing dominance. In the past decade, China has poured billions into developing its own processors to reduce reliance on US technology. From Huawei’s smartphone chips to supercomputers, China knows that controlling processor IP is key to tech leadership. The lesson is clear: those who design and control chips set the pace in everything from consumer gadgets to defense systems.

    RISC-V: India’s Open-Source Chip Opportunity

    Enter RISC-V, an open-source processor architecture – a chip blueprint anyone can use freely without royalties. Unlike ARM or Intel’s designs, no single company owns RISC-V. This means Indian engineers can design processors on a level playing field, free from licensing restrictions or foreign approval. India is already investing in this arena with government-backed programs to develop indigenous RISC-V chips. By embracing this open architecture, we can create everything from IoT microcontrollers to AI accelerators that are Made in India. RISC-V is our chance to build an independent chip ecosystem from scratch.

    Beyond Coders: Nurturing India’s Chip Creators

    If India aspires to be a global tech superpower, it must move beyond being the world’s software back-office and cultivate tech creators who master both software and silicon. We have millions of developers – now we need to train homegrown chip designers. Indian startups and research labs should be building processors optimized for our needs, from secure defense systems to everyday electronics. The government’s recent RISC-V push is a start, but it must be matched by education and industry investment. Developing apps is good, but designing the chips they run on is even better. By moving from coders to chip creators, India can gain true tech independence and secure its digital future.

  • Why India Needs to Think Bigger Than Grocery Apps

    On one side, we see Chinese startups building electric vehicles, semiconductors, AI platforms, and advanced robotics. And on the other side, many Indian startups are busy with food delivery, grocery apps, ice creams, and fantasy sports.

    It’s Not About What’s “Bad”

    Let’s be clear—these sectors aren’t useless. Convenience-driven apps have improved daily life, created jobs, and brought tech to millions. But if our vision as a startup ecosystem stays limited to comfort and convenience, how will India ever become a global tech leader?

    What China Is Building

    China is making its own chips, leading battery technology, and creating global supply chains. It is investing heavily in deep-tech and future-forward infrastructure. Their ambition is global domination—and they’re building like it.

    India’s Missed Opportunity?

    We need to step out of short-term thinking and focus on long-term innovation. Deep-tech is risky. It’s slow. But it’s also where true impact lies. If India wants to lead the world tomorrow, we have to start building like that today.

    Think Big. Build Bold.

    What India has already built is impressive. But what we can build is where our real future lies. We have the talent. We have the energy. Now we need the ambition.

    So let’s stop settling for what’s easy—and start aiming for what’s transformational.

    🇮🇳 Think big. Build bold.

    Conclusion

    India’s startup ecosystem has huge potential—but we must expand our vision beyond comfort. For more thoughts on this topic, check out our YouTube Short(In Hindi):
    Watch the YouTube Short.

  • From Food Delivery to Deep Tech: What Piyush Goyal’s Message Really Means for Indian Startups

    At Startup Mahakumbh, when Commerce & Industry Minister Piyush Goyal asked—“Will we remain limited to food delivery and gig work?”—it created a buzz across India’s startup circles.

    It Wasn’t Criticism. It Was a Challenge.

    I was there. I heard his full session live. While many perceived his words as critical, I saw them as a bold and honest reminder. India’s startup ecosystem is already the third largest in the world. But if we truly want to become number one, we need to move beyond comfort and convenience.

    Time to Go Beyond Food Delivery

    We’ve built successful companies in food delivery, e-commerce, and gig economy—but now it’s time to step into deep-tech, AI, semiconductors, space-tech, and climate-tech. These are the areas where the future is being shaped.

    The Government Has Taken the First Step

    Infrastructure is improving. Policies are becoming founder-friendly. PLI schemes, semiconductor missions, AI research funding—all of this is already in motion. Now it’s our turn as founders to lead innovation that positions India on the global tech map.

    Don’t Take It Personally. Take It Seriously.

    Piyush Goyal ji is not against founders. He is rooting for us. He is encouraging us to aim higher—not just to build what’s trending, but what will matter 10 years from now. The real question isn’t “Why did he say that?”—it’s “What are we doing next?”

    Conclusion

    What we’ve already built is inspiring. But what we’re capable of building—there’s no limit to that. Let’s not settle for being the largest convenience economy. Let’s aim to be the world’s innovation powerhouse.

    For more insights, check out our YouTube Short (in Hindi) on this topic:
    Watch the YouTube Short.