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6G drive: India prepares for 6G trials; global experts at IMC 2025 call for collaboration – The Times of India
India is gearing up for 6G trials, with global experts at the India Mobile Congress (IMC) 2025 highlighting the country’s growing importance in next-generation network development and international collaboration. Industry leaders and researchers told ANI that India’s push in 6G research and innovation could shape the future of global connectivity.Ashutosh Dutta, Chief 5G Strategist at Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory, told news agency ANI that ubiquitous connectivity would be a defining feature of 6G. “Not everybody has access to cell towers or Wi-Fi, so when these are not available, we fall back to satellite,” he said. Dutta emphasised the need to integrate non-terrestrial and terrestrial networks to ensure seamless communication. “Operators, academics, and service providers should work together to build prototypes, simulations, and testbeds to support different applications,” he added.He also underlined that secure and uninterrupted connectivity will be critical for 6G adoption. “As we switch between access technologies like Wi-Fi and satellite, maintaining security and privacy will be crucial,” Dutta noted, adding that cross-country collaboration on chip development and AI-enabled technologies would strengthen network resilience. “India has real technical manpower and strong government support. What we need is collaboration among academia, industry, and government to develop the future skill set,” he said.Professor Harald Haas, Professor of Engineering and widely known as the “Father of Li-Fi,” said the technology could play a transformative role in India’s connectivity landscape. “Li-Fi can help connect rural communities by building free-space optical communications where fibre is too expensive,” he told ANI. He added that Li-Fi could complement 5G and 6G networks by offering additional data capacity and energy-efficient connectivity. “We can even use solar panels as broadband receivers, harnessing both sunlight and data together,” Haas said, quoted ANI.Echoing the sentiment, Iwao Hosako, Executive at Japan’s National Institute of Information and Communication Technology (NICT), said India is emerging as a major power in communications and software. “India is a very big power because of its industries in communications and software development,” he told ANI. Hosako said Japan sees immense potential to collaborate with India on new services and technologies. “Many talented people from India already work with us, and we hope to expand this cooperation to a higher level, between industries and governments,” he added.
Business
Scams have grown more sophisticated, but people are fighting back
As governments across the world restricted the movements of their citizens during Covid lockdowns from 2020, people spent more time online. We bought more online and socialised more online, and this brought us closer to the people who want to scam us. At the same time, realistic video impersonations, voices, websites, and texts became more commonplace, and scammers increased their use of social media including WhatsApp.
Business
Fuel costs: I can’t afford to go to work, says home care worker
The conflict in the Middle East has caused rapid price rises for both petrol and diesel.
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NaBFID signs pact with PDCOR to expand advisory support for state projects – The Times of India
The National Bank for Financing Infrastructure and Development (NaBFID) has signed a Memorandum of Agreement with Projects Development Company of Rajasthan Limited (PDCOR) to strengthen advisory services for state and city-level infrastructure projects.The agreement will also allow both institutions to jointly explore financing and transaction advisory opportunities, including transaction structuring, commercial and technical due diligence, and support for financial closure of projects undertaken by state governments and urban local bodies across India, according to PTI.“This collaboration seeks to enhance access to long-term institutional finance for State Governments and Urban Local Bodies, while strengthening the infrastructure advisory and financing ecosystem,” Rajkiran Rai G., Managing Director of NaBFID, said.He added that the partnership would help both institutions jointly pursue project advisory opportunities, develop replicable financing frameworks, accelerate financial closures and mobilise capital across the infrastructure value chain.Monika Kalia, DMD-CFO, NaBFID, said the tie-up would leverage the strengths of both organisations to provide much-needed advisory support to states and urban local bodies for impactful urban infrastructure projects.Dileep Chingapurath, Chief Executive Officer, PDCOR, said the agreement would address the long-felt need for end-to-end professional support to structure and mobilise sustainable financing solutions, particularly for state governments and their agencies.“Through this collaboration, both institutions aim to enhance the quality of project preparation, mobilise institutional capital more effectively and accelerate the implementation of sustainable infrastructure projects across states and municipalities,” he said.NaBFID is a Development Financial Institution focused on long-term infrastructure financing, while PDCOR is an undertaking of the Government of Rajasthan.
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