
India is reaching for its own world-class AI engine – DW – 06/05/2025
Despite thousands of AI startups cropping up in India, the nation has yet to produce its own premium AI engine. Why is there no Indian version of DeepSeek or ChatGPT?
With over 5 million IT workers and a growing focus on artifical intelligence (AI) in education, Indiaseems to be in an ideal position for what is shaping up to be a global race in AI technology. But while the US set the global AI standard with ChatGPT in 2023, and China quickly closed the gap with its powerful chatbot DeepSeek, India has yet to produce an equivalent Large Language Model (LLM) that can mimic human communication.
And it's not for the lack of ambition. According to data from market intelligence firm Tracxn, the Indian AI sector includes 7,114 startups that have collectively raised $23 billion (€20.15 billion) in equity funding so far. Last year, Prime Minister Narendra Modi's Cabinet approved the IndiaAI Mission initiative with a budget of nearly $1.21 billion, aiming to "undertake the development and deployment of indigenous Large Multimodal Models (LMMs) and domain-specific foundational models in critical sectors."
DeepSeek: Cheap AI model shakes up tech industry
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This week, IndiaAI Mission CEO Abhishek Singh said Indian startups need to think beyond their home turf to compete and succeed against global giants.
"They will have to ultimately compete with the best in the world," Singh said at the Accel AI Summit in Bengaluru. "Initial level of support may come from the government, but that will not sustain them in the long run."
"They will have to have a global vision in mind when they are training models," Singh said.
AI development needs industry, government and academia
Representatives of the National Association of Software and Service Companies (NASSCOM), the voice of India's $283 billion tech industry, point out that building a globally recognized AI model is a complex, resource-intensive process.
"The argument is not whether India can catch up, but whether we can move fast enough and define an AI identity on our own," Satyaki Maitra, senior manager communications of NASSCOM, told DW.
Last week, IndiaAI Mission announced the addition of 15,916 Graphics Processing Units (GPUs), which are essential for AI research due to their capacity to perform calculations in parallel. The latest boost will bring the total national AI computing capacity to 34,333 GPUs through public-private partnerships.
NVIDIA profits up, despite trade war challenges
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Startups such as Gan AI, Gnan AI, SarvamAI and Soket AI, supported by the IndiaAI Mission, are building foundational models tailored to India, while firms like Sarvam AI, Fractal and CoRover AI are focusing on AI innovation.
"However, AI success cannot be achieved through isolated innovation," said Maitra. "It requires cohesive collaboration between government, industry, and academia to build the full value chain, from compute and data governance to model training and real-world deployment."
What is holding Indian AI back?
Pawan Duggal, the country's foremost cybersecurity expert, told DW that India is likely to face a shortage of high-end AI hardware, limited access to advanced GPUs, and insufficient cloud computing resources, which are essential for training large-scale AI models.
"There is also a significant investment shortfall when compared to global peers. While venture capital investment in Indian AI startups has increased, it remains a fraction of what is seen in the US or China," said Duggal.
"The US invested $2.34 trillion and China $832 billion in ventures and startups from 2014 to 2023, while India invested $145 billion in the same period," he added.
Can AI blackmail us? Facts vs. fear
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Duggal believes that India is already moving towards creating its own AI model, but it has yet to address significant challenges including infrastructure, funding, talent, data, and regulation.
'Brains are plenty in India'
Another issue facing Indian engineers is the diversity of languages in India, with English being just one of 22 official languages in the world's most populous country. Furthermore, official languages make up only a tiny faction of over 1,600 languages spoken within its borders.
"The only use-case of an 'Indian' LLM is if it works in our various languages which is difficult as of now given that there is a lack of quality data for LLMs to train on in most Indian languages," Yash Shah of Momentum 91, a leading custom software development company, told DW.
"For an LLM in English, there are other companies and countries which are far ahead of us and would continue to be that way," said Shah.
'Godfather of AI' urges tougher government rules
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However, Utpal Vaishnav of Upsquare Technologies, a global technology holding company, says the real obstacles are actually "risk-shy investors, patchy data rules, and tight GPU supply."
"Brains are plenty in India. GPUs are on the way and our multilingual data is waiting to be shaped. Give this talent, patient capital and clear problems and a compact, world-class LLM can be launched in two, three years," Vaishnav told DW.
Edited by: Darko Janjevic
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DW
a day ago
- DW
India's air force hampered by aging fleet, delivery delays – DW – 06/06/2025
Chronic delays in defense procurement are frustrating India's efforts to expand its military fleet, with its top air force commander publicly calling out unmet goals and unrealistic timelines. In an unusual public disapproval of India's weapons manufacturing ecosystem, Indian Air Force (IAF) chief Amar Preet Singh lamented the delays plaguing the country's defense projects and urged accountability. Speaking at a high-profile industry gathering in the capital New Delhi last week, in the presence of Defense Minister Rajnath Singh, the air chief declared that contract timelines are routinely unrealistic and questioned the fundamental credibility of delivery promises made by public sector defense companies. "Many times, we know while signing contracts that those systems will never come. Not a single project that I can think of has been completed on time," said Singh, referring to the agreed deadlines at the time of contract signing. "Why should we promise something which cannot be achieved?" Singh asked. While pointing to the changing nature and landscape of warfare involving drone technology, the air chief urged timely induction of new technologies into the armed forces. In 2016, India signed a deal with France for 36 Rafale jets Image: DebajyotixChakraborty/NurPhoto/IMAGO India aims to overhaul defense ecosystem For several years, the IAF has faced repeated delays in the delivery of new aircraft, especially the indigenous multirole combat jet Tejas Mk1A. For instance, not a single Tejas Mk1A from the 2021 order has yet been delivered despite repeated assurances of their imminent arrival. Singh's latest comments come on the heels of recent armed clashes between India and Pakistan, where Indian air force employed manned aircraft alongside drones, enabling deeper incursions into Pakistani airspace. The aerial confrontation was in response to a deadly attack by Islamist assailants that killed 26 people, mostly Hindu men, in India-administered Kashmir. New Delhi has accused Pakistan of supporting the attack, a charge Islamabad denies. During the four days of fierce clashes, reports emerged of aircraft losses and integration challenges. Pakistan's defense minister claimed three of India's fighter jets had been shot down during the fighting, though this was not independently verified. India's chief of defense staff told Reuters last week that India suffered losses in the air, but declined to give details. India, Pakistan pull back from brink of war over Kashmir To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video Defense analysts say India urgently needs boost aircraft production and its modernization efforts to ensure its air force remains combat-ready. However, India's defense procurement system has been chronically bogged down by a complex, multi-stage procedures, frequent changes in requirements, and prolonged negotiations — often leading to projects taking years longer than initially planned. Plane prototypes arriving too late Tara Kartha, former member of the National Security Council Secretariat, which sits at the apex of India's national security architecture, flagged the slow pace of procurement which impacts the military's operational readiness. "Programs like the Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft (AMCA) and Tejas Mk-2 are still in development, with functional prototypes expected by 2028–2029, which are too slow to address immediate needs," Kartha told DW. In her reckoning, the systemic changes envisaged by Prime Minister Narender Modi have not taken off, with the Defense Research and Development Organization (DRDO) still unable to deliver projects on time. "It is time the defense services have a separate cadre for procurement and development to optimize efficiency and get away from bottlenecks," Kartha underlined. India looks abroad as Russian jets age out Former Lieutenant General Deependra Singh Hooda, who handled numerous strategic challenges along the borders with both Pakistan and China, points to evolving threats in the region as the reason for urgency in military procurement and modernization. "The air chief is absolutely correct. The fighter aircraft fleet has shrunk significantly due to delays in delivery of indigenous fighters," Hooda told DW. "Some hard decisions now must be taken, including considering foreign buys to ensure that the air force has adequate capability to take on future challenges. Meanwhile, we need to look beyond the public sector units to energize the private sector," he said. Programs like the Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft (AMCA) are too slow to address immediate needs, Kartha said Image: Stringer/REUTERS The IAF currently operates 31 combat squadrons, far below its sanctioned strength of 42. Considering a typical squadron has about 18 to 20 aircraft, the shortfall of 11 squadrons would amount to around 200 fighter jets. This shortfall is due to the retirement of aging aircraft like the MiG-21, MiG-23, and MiG-27 in the 2000s and 2010s without adequate replacement. The procurement process for the French-made Rafale multirole fighter aircraft has been relatively faster and smoother compared to many other major defense deals but it has still involved significant timelines and strategic considerations. In 2016, India finally signed a government-to-government deal with France for 36 Rafale jets. Air power proves crucial Former Air Marshal Raghunath Nambiar pointed out that the IAF's ability to project power, achieve air dominance, and deliver precision strikes proved to be crucial during the recent fighting with Pakistan. "The events of those 90 hours underscore the pivotal and decisive role of the Indian Air Force. It was the sustained and impactful application of air power, targeting critical enemy infrastructure and capabilities," Nambiar told DW. "While broader geopolitical considerations and actions by other arms of the military played their part, the offensive air campaign was undoubtedly the principal factor that broke the enemy's will to continue the conflict," he added. At the same time, the aerial confrontation has also highlighted the growing influence of Chinese military technology, with Pakistan reportedly using the Chinese-made J-10C fighter jet and PL-15 long-range air-to-air missiles. This deployment has drawn global attention, particularly from the US and Western nations, as it signals China's advancing capabilities in air warfare. Drones and AI: How technology is changing warfare To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video Scaling up India's defense manufacturing Konark Rai, managing director of Rudram Dynamics, a defense startup, said the recent clashes were not just a test of India's armed forces but also a stress test for its defense industry. "When a war or national emergency hits and mass production is suddenly required, these firms falter. Not for the lack of effort or innovation, but because the system they operate in does not empower them to scale on demand," Rai told DW. Rai said the time has come for structural reform. "First, the archaic L1 or lowest bidder system and No Cost No Commitment (NCNC) trials must be rethought," said Rai, referring to a process in defense acquisitions where the government neither bears the cost of trials nor commits to buy the product after the trial. While admitting due diligence was necessary, Rai pointed out that staging trials without commitment is extremely risky and expensive HE claims the process discourages companies, especially small and medium ones, from contributing to defense procurement. "A better approach would be for defense forces to proactively scout technologies across the country in collaboration with local colleges, rather than just with the institutions of national importance," he added. Edited by: Srinivas Mazumdaru


Int'l Business Times
2 days ago
- Int'l Business Times
You're Already Using Voice AI at Work — Here's How It's Changing Everything
Welcome to Tech Times' AI EXPLAINED , where we look at the tech of today and tomorrow. Brought to you by Using voice AI at work is already happening. You might think AI at work means typing prompts into ChatGPT or getting a slick summary from your inbox. But the real shift is happening in your ears. From whispered prompts during Zoom calls to voice bots taking fast food orders, AI is quietly changing how we work, and you might not even realize it's there. Voice AI isn't just a flashy gadget or customer service gimmick. It's becoming a built-in layer across industries: transcribing your meetings, answering your calls, and even drafting your doctor's notes. As tools like Microsoft Copilot, and drive-thru voice bots quietly embed themselves in daily workflows, they're not only reshaping tasks, they're shifting what it means to show up, speak up, and stay relevant in a workplace that's learning to listen. Game studio founder and voice AI advisor Mike Sorrenti is bullish on the tech. "Voice ai is an excellent thing. It can be used for translation and many other things and if a very natural interface for kids, and older adults especially those with mild disabilities such as arthritis," he said in an email. Enhancing Workplace Productivity with Voice AI Visitors interact with Microsoft Copilot demos at a tech event, where AI-powered assistants like voice-enabled copilots are reshaping how we collaborate at work. A recent UK government study showed that civil servants who used Microsoft's Copilot AI for administrative tasks saved an average of 26 minutes a day, which works out to about two weeks of gained time per year. Voice AI plays a key role in this shift from the pre-AI workplace to the current AI workplace, becoming useful in transcription, summarization, and virtual meeting assistants. Previously, you'd have to have a human assistant sit in on your Zoom or Microsoft Teams meetings to take notes, or delegate someone who may or may not be good at live note-taking to manage these. Voice AI assistants can now log, transcribe and summarize your meetings, often without the people in the meeting really understanding what's being recorded or how it's being analyzed. Workers are already adjusting how and when they speak during meetings, knowing that their words might be captured and re-contextualized by AI summaries. has also introduced a voice-activated AI version of its AI meeting assistant, letting users join and manage meetings without having to take notes. Now that we're used to asking Siri to take a note or set a timer, asking your AI voice agent to start recording will be a cinch. The shift from passive transcription to an interactive agentic AI system is subtle, but it is here. Users can even give verbal commands mid-meeting, obviating the need for someone who understands the user interface of an app, for example, or web controls, all in real-time. This isn't a backend utility, either; rather, tools like Otter are becoming active participants in meetings, giving us a glimpse at a future where AI agents might take on even more collaborative roles. While tools like this save time and offer easier control, the issues of privacy, consent, surveillance, and etiquette in meetings (especially in hybrid or remote work environments can be substantive. But first, a quick casting call for our sponsor and partner of AI EXPLAINED this month, PlaudAI - the No.1 AI note-taker that does exactly what you'd imagine an AI assistant can do in 2025. Do you use voice AI in your daily work? Are you a journalist, doctor, lawyer, educator, or creator doing something smart with your voice? 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Australian franchises of KFC have also started testing out AI-driven voice ordering, though customers there have pushed back a bit, saying they prefer human interaction and their orders being misinterpreted by the AI window jockey. Still, even this workplace is evolving as AI starts to support and replace humans in these high-turnover, low-wage roles. As a consumer, you might have to learn how to talk to AI bots, and as a worker, you'll likely need to up your skills to fit roles that need a more human touch. Revolutionizing Healthcare with Ambient Voice AI A doctor speaks during an interview, highlighting how voice AI tools are increasingly being adopted in healthcare settings — from clinical dictation to patient notes. Microsoft's DAX Copilot automates recordkeeping, updates patient records, and can draft care plans all from just listening in to conversations between doctors and patients. The idea is that physicians can spend more time on patient care than on record keeping, thereby improving health outcomes for more people. Microsoft is also transforming the workplace of nurses, with ambient voice and other AI technologies becoming integrated into nursing workflows, alleviating the burden of so much documentation, reducing burnout, and allowing nurses to spend more time on patient care. Global Reach and No-Code Tools for Voice AI A startup in Bengaluru (formerly Bangalore) in southern India is offering a no-code conversational AI platform that lets other businesses deploy real-time, multilingual voice agents for customer support and services. Ring AI has expanded beyond India to the Middle East and Latin America, supporting languages like Arabic and Spanish. Global workplaces that couldn't afford the high-cost development of their own voice AI systems can now contract with Ringg AI and deploy AI agents to help them with their businesses. While that does mean that AI tools may replace workers at major companies, it does mean that smaller shops can afford the cost of entry to compete on the level of voice AI at larger corporations. Gev Balyan, CEO of Hoory AI says, "Startups and solopreneurs now have an always-on assistant — answering calls, qualifying leads, booking — at enterprise scale, without enterprise cost." What It All Means For You A glowing AI key on a sleek keyboard symbolizes how artificial intelligence — including voice-powered assistants — is becoming a built-in part of everyday work tools. So what does the current adoption of Voice AI mean for you. Whether you're running (or taking) meetings, answering customer support calls, or just trying to get through all the email you receive in a day, Voice AI is likely becoming a bigger part of your day, whether you realize it or not. The tools are changing how we connect with colleagues and higher-ups, the tasks that make up our daily work, and even what kinds of jobs are growing (or shrinking). As an employee, it could mean you'll do fewer routine tasks and spend more time thinking, making decisions, or even managing these AI tools directly. But you'll still need to learn to work with AI, knowing what it's good at, how to manage it when if makes mistakes, and how to communicate with AI tools that are always listening. As a business owner, you might feel like AI will boost your workers' productivity while reducing costs, but you'll also need to keep an eye out on issues of privacy, trust, and training. You may want to start hiring people who have higher levels of judgment, empathy, and communication to be able to work with your new AI systems. Bottom line, AI isn't coming for your job all at once, but it is coming to change parts of your job already. The best thing here is to stay relevant by focusing on what you can do that AI can't, yet: connect with others, understand nuance, and adapt when things go off the rails. Originally published on Tech Times


DW
2 days ago
- DW
India is reaching for its own world-class AI engine – DW – 06/05/2025
Despite thousands of AI startups cropping up in India, the nation has yet to produce its own premium AI engine. Why is there no Indian version of DeepSeek or ChatGPT? With over 5 million IT workers and a growing focus on artifical intelligence (AI) in education, Indiaseems to be in an ideal position for what is shaping up to be a global race in AI technology. But while the US set the global AI standard with ChatGPT in 2023, and China quickly closed the gap with its powerful chatbot DeepSeek, India has yet to produce an equivalent Large Language Model (LLM) that can mimic human communication. And it's not for the lack of ambition. According to data from market intelligence firm Tracxn, the Indian AI sector includes 7,114 startups that have collectively raised $23 billion (€20.15 billion) in equity funding so far. Last year, Prime Minister Narendra Modi's Cabinet approved the IndiaAI Mission initiative with a budget of nearly $1.21 billion, aiming to "undertake the development and deployment of indigenous Large Multimodal Models (LMMs) and domain-specific foundational models in critical sectors." DeepSeek: Cheap AI model shakes up tech industry To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video This week, IndiaAI Mission CEO Abhishek Singh said Indian startups need to think beyond their home turf to compete and succeed against global giants. "They will have to ultimately compete with the best in the world," Singh said at the Accel AI Summit in Bengaluru. "Initial level of support may come from the government, but that will not sustain them in the long run." "They will have to have a global vision in mind when they are training models," Singh said. AI development needs industry, government and academia Representatives of the National Association of Software and Service Companies (NASSCOM), the voice of India's $283 billion tech industry, point out that building a globally recognized AI model is a complex, resource-intensive process. "The argument is not whether India can catch up, but whether we can move fast enough and define an AI identity on our own," Satyaki Maitra, senior manager communications of NASSCOM, told DW. Last week, IndiaAI Mission announced the addition of 15,916 Graphics Processing Units (GPUs), which are essential for AI research due to their capacity to perform calculations in parallel. The latest boost will bring the total national AI computing capacity to 34,333 GPUs through public-private partnerships. NVIDIA profits up, despite trade war challenges To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video Startups such as Gan AI, Gnan AI, SarvamAI and Soket AI, supported by the IndiaAI Mission, are building foundational models tailored to India, while firms like Sarvam AI, Fractal and CoRover AI are focusing on AI innovation. "However, AI success cannot be achieved through isolated innovation," said Maitra. "It requires cohesive collaboration between government, industry, and academia to build the full value chain, from compute and data governance to model training and real-world deployment." What is holding Indian AI back? Pawan Duggal, the country's foremost cybersecurity expert, told DW that India is likely to face a shortage of high-end AI hardware, limited access to advanced GPUs, and insufficient cloud computing resources, which are essential for training large-scale AI models. "There is also a significant investment shortfall when compared to global peers. While venture capital investment in Indian AI startups has increased, it remains a fraction of what is seen in the US or China," said Duggal. "The US invested $2.34 trillion and China $832 billion in ventures and startups from 2014 to 2023, while India invested $145 billion in the same period," he added. Can AI blackmail us? Facts vs. fear To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video Duggal believes that India is already moving towards creating its own AI model, but it has yet to address significant challenges including infrastructure, funding, talent, data, and regulation. 'Brains are plenty in India' Another issue facing Indian engineers is the diversity of languages in India, with English being just one of 22 official languages in the world's most populous country. Furthermore, official languages make up only a tiny faction of over 1,600 languages spoken within its borders. "The only use-case of an 'Indian' LLM is if it works in our various languages which is difficult as of now given that there is a lack of quality data for LLMs to train on in most Indian languages," Yash Shah of Momentum 91, a leading custom software development company, told DW. "For an LLM in English, there are other companies and countries which are far ahead of us and would continue to be that way," said Shah. 'Godfather of AI' urges tougher government rules To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video However, Utpal Vaishnav of Upsquare Technologies, a global technology holding company, says the real obstacles are actually "risk-shy investors, patchy data rules, and tight GPU supply." "Brains are plenty in India. GPUs are on the way and our multilingual data is waiting to be shaped. Give this talent, patient capital and clear problems and a compact, world-class LLM can be launched in two, three years," Vaishnav told DW. Edited by: Darko Janjevic