Google will build new campus in Hyderabad: Sundar Pichai

Google CEO Sundar Pichai gestures during a news conference in New Delhi on Wednesday. | PTI
Google CEO Sundar Pichai gestures during a news conference in New Delhi on Wednesday. | PTI

NEW DELHI (TIP): Sundar Pichai, the Indian-origin CEO of Google, said that the company will build a new campus in Hyderabad to enhance capabilities, on Wednesday, December 16.

Regarding the company’s expansion plans in India, Pichai said: “We will ramp up our engineering investments at our Bangalore and Hyderabad facilities. “Google is looking at hiring people for Bangalore and Hyderabad… We will also build a huge new campus in Hyderabad to build capabilities.”

He did not disclose the investment proposed by the company, which now has 1,500 employees in India.

“It makes a lot of sense to invest in India as what we build here will have global usage,” Pichai said.

“This country has given me and Google so much. I just hope we can give much more to the country,” Pichai said, adding, “a lot of what today is about is how we build products for the next billion Indian users, yet to come online.”

Pichai also said that Google will provide wi-fi connectivity in 100 railway stations across India in 2016 as part of its association with RailTel.

“In our attempt to provide internet access to people, we have decided to provide Wi-Fi at 400 railway stations in association with RailTel. The first 100 stations will come online by 2016-end. Mumbai Central station will be online by early January,” Pichai said at ‘Google for India’ event.

He said the American multinational technology company was working towards including as many people as possible in the use of internet in India, and added the company will develop products in India that have global usage.

Later in the day, Pichai met union Communications Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad, who said Google has reached in-principle agreement with the Indian government for its research and development project, Loon.

The project is aimed at providing internet connectivity in rural India.

“I have proposed Google to partner with the state-owned telecommunications company Bharat Sanchar Nigam Limited for the pilot project,” Prasad said.

Pichai’s announcements were part of the assurance Google held out to Prime Minister Narendra Modi during his visit to the search engine giant’s headquarters at Mountain View, Santa Clara county, California, in September.

This is Chennai-born Pichai’s first visit to India after he became the CEO of the restructured Google in August.

The company is beginning training programmes for two million new Android developers over the next three years that will make it easier for Indian developers to build solutions to local problems.

The online search giant is also partnering with the National Skill Development Council for this.

Pichai also laid out Google’s approach to promoting the Internet in India.

First, Google aims to give people in India and other developing countries better access to full internet through better connectivity and high-quality software.

Second, Google is making Google products work better for Indians. And Google wants to make it easier for Indians to build on top of Google’s global platforms like Android and Chrome to build solutions to local problems.

He also pointed out how women are lagging behind in Internet use in India and underlined that it is important that sizeable number of women should have access to Internet.

“By 2018, more than 500 million users will be online in India, from all 29 states, speaking over 23 languages. But in 2020, over 30 percent of mobile Internet will still be from 2G connections.

“Google has been on a long journey in India to build products that connect more people, regardless of cost, connectivity, language, gender, or location,” Rajan Anandan, vice president of Google in India and Southeast Asia, said.

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