Wednesday, October 6, 2021

Classroom Teaching: AICTE Directs Institutes To Install Hi-Tech Gadgets To Beat Covid-19

Classroom Teaching: AICTE Directs Institutes To Install Hi-Tech Gadgets To Beat Covid-19

In its latest circular, the AICTE has asked its affiliated educational institutions to take the necessary steps for installation of air-sanitization devices based on Ultra - Violet C band irradiation in auditoriums, buildings, AC Buses etc.

VIKASH SHARMA
INDIA
PUBLISHED: SATURDAY, 02 OCTOBER 2021
LAST UPDATED: 02 OCTOBER 2021, 02:05 PM IST


Photo: For Representational Purposes

Classroom Teaching: AICTE Directs Institutes To Install Hi-Tech Gadgets To Beat Covid-19


The All India Council For Technical Education (AICTE) has issued a circular directing institutions and universities to take special measures for the installation of several devices to put a check on the spread of Covid-19 during resumption of physical mode of teaching for the current academic session.

In its latest circular, the AICTE has asked its affiliated educational institutions to take the necessary steps for installation of air-sanitization devices based on Ultra - Violet C band irradiation in auditoriums, buildings, AC Buses etc.

The AICTE has also asked to install the 'Circulating Air Flow Purelevator’ technology' for lifts, toilets, washrooms and the 'Standalone Air- Circulation Technology ' for rooms to reduce cross-infections and restoring confidence among students during the physical classes in the current academic year.

It is pertinent to mention here that the Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR), the premier national R&D organisation under the Ministry of Science and Technology, has developed possible solutions and interventions that are required to contain the tremendous challenge faced by the country due to SARS-COV-2 virus that causes Covid19.

As a possible mitigation measure, CSIR constituent laboratories, CSIR-Central Scientific Instruments Organization (CSIRCSIO), CSIR-Central Building Research institute (CSIR-CBRI) and CSIR- Institute of Microbial Technology (CSIR - lMTech) have developed and made available air-sanitization devices based on Ultra-Violet C band irradiation.

“These devices, once extensively implemented in community spaces like schools and colleges, have the potential of reducing cross-infections and restoring students' confidence in academic places,” the circular added.

AICTE wants colleges to install air purifiers

AICTE wants colleges to install air purifiers

Bangalore Mirror Bureau / Oct 6, 2021, 06.00 AM IST
By Dhanalakshmi TL 

With classes slowly shifting to offline mode, the All India Council for Technical Education (AICTE) has now asked colleges to install air-sanitisation devices based on ultra-violet C band irradiation. AICTE member secretary Professor Rajive Kumar said that during the pandemic, the Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR) have developed possible solutions and interventions required to contain the tremendous challenge faced by the country due to covid. “The aerosol, air-borne route of the virus is now considered as the most likely cause for spread of infection. This mode of virus dispersal has been confirmed by major agencies like WHO. As a possible mitigation measure, CSIR institutes have developed air-sanitisation based on ultra-violet C band irradiation. These devices, once extensively implemented in community spaces like schools and colleges, have potential of reducing cross-infections and restoring students’ confidence in academic places,” he said. These AICTE-approved institutes have been suggested to take necessary steps for installation of these devices, auditoriums, buildings, and AC buses, etc. The circulating air-flow technology has been suggested for lifts, toilets and washrooms while a standalone air-circulation technology for rooms has the potential of reducing cross infections during physical classes in the current academic year.


Source: https://bangaloremirror.indiatimes.com/bangalore/others/aicte-wants-colleges-to-install-air-purifiers/articleshow/86798927.cms

Indian scientists working on 1st ever dengue DNA vaccine

Indian scientists working on 1st ever dengue DNA vaccineThis is the second dengue vaccine candidate from India.(Reuters file photo. Representative image)
Updated on Sep 28, 2021 04:25 AM IST

By Anonna Dutt, New Delhi


The world’s first DNA vaccine was approved for use in India recently. Developed by the Ahmedabad-based Zydus Cadila, ZyCoV-D is, as the name indicates, is a vaccine against Covid-19. Now, some researchers believe the technology -- considered superior because DNA vaccines are easier to make and store, and, most importantly store an enormous amount of information -- can be used to develop a vaccine for another tropical disease, dengue, a viral infection transmitted by mosquitoes.


“We know that there are four serotypes of the virus, but what we found was that there were genetic variations within the serotypes -- any sequence with over 6% difference is considered to be a different genotype. So, the team created a consensus sequence that is the same across the genotypes as well,” said Dr Easwaran Sreekumar, senior scientist at Rajiv Gandhi Centre for Biotechnology-Thiruvananthapuram and one of the corresponding authors of the yet-to-be peer-reviewed paper uploaded on MedRxiv.

With the DNA vaccine platform allowing them to pick pieces of genetic material that can be used in the vaccine, the researchers resorted to sequencing the virus from four regions in the country that report dengue cases and selecting the common parts.


The virus that causes dengue has four types with four different viral antigens – essentially proteins that cause the infection and against which antibodies are created.

The researchers selected a part called EDIII (short for envelope protein domain III) from all the four serotypes of the virus, which is widely considered the most important viral protein. In addition, the researchers also selected the NS1 protein from the DENV2 serotype, which is known to cause severe dengue with internal bleeding and drop in blood pressure.

“In the traditional vaccines, the whole envelope protein is used that can lead to Antibody Dependant Enhancement (a phenomenon where the viral antigen is bound to less effective antibodies, something that actually makes the virus more effective) . We have used only the domain III of the envelope protein from all four serotypes to avoid ADE. And, we have added the NS1 protein from DENV2 that is known to generate both T cell and B cell response,” said Dr Arun Sankaradoss, project lead and scientist at Tata Institute of Fundamental Research-Bangalore. T and B cells are lymphocyte or white blood cells that are part of the immune system.


This, they say, is likely to provide effective immune response against all four serotypes of the virus, without causing ADE or antibody-dependent enhancement where antibodies generated against some of the serotypes by the vaccine can lead to a severe disease by the other serotypes.

This is what is believed to have happened with the only approved vaccine against dengue, where the vaccinated individuals developed more severe disease in the Phillipines. The vaccine uses live weakened virus to elicit immune response.

The DNA technology based vaccine candidate was tested on a mice model for DENV2 dengue and a good response was seen.

“We still do not have mice models for the other three serotypes; we are trying to create it. The vaccine candidate was found to be protective in the mice model and also neutralised the other three serotypes of the virus effectively in lab experiments. It is usually the DENV2 against which the immune response is the least and we have tested that,” said Sreekumar.


This is the second dengue vaccine candidate from India, with the other one being developed by researchers from International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology (ICGEB). The ICGEB vaccine uses a virus-like particle using the same EDIII portion of the dengue virus.

“So far, DNA vaccines hadn’t been successful in producing good immune response; but with ZyCoV-D we now have a safe and effective DNA vaccine. It is a very versatile platform. It brings down the manufacturing cost. It is stable at room temperature for a year, and at 4 degrees forever. This means it will be a very good candidate for resource constrained settings. That is the reason we have also used sequences from Eastern Africa for the vaccine,” said Sankaradoss.


Globally, there are at least five vaccines under development against dengue. Traditionally, the four serotypes have posed a challenge for dengue vaccine.

Once developed, the vaccines cannot only help India but the neighbouring countries. Asia contributes nearly 70% of the total dengue burden in the world. The World Health Organisation estimates that there are 390 million dengue virus infections every year, of which 96 million become symptomatic.

One hundred twenty-six countries or territories saw dengue infections according to Global Burden Disease (GBD) 2019.

The global number of dengue episodes increased 85.47% from 30.67 million in 1990 to 56.88 million in 2019, highlighting the importance of developing an effective vaccine against the viral disease that is a major public health concern globally.


“The dengue vaccine is very important as there are pockets across the country that report a flare up in cases every few years, and lead to deaths especially in children like we saw in Firozabad. A vaccine can prevent these deaths. Dengue cases are going up not just in urban centres but also across the rural parts of the country wherever construction activities such as for the roads are being undertaken,” said Dr PL Joshi, former head of the National Vector Borne Disease Control Programme.

As crypto booms, exchanges need a variety of engineers

 As crypto booms, exchanges need a variety of engineers

TNN | Oct 6, 2021, 08.04 AM IST
As crypto booms, exchanges need a variety of engineers
The world is still divided on whether cryptocurrencies will survive. But for now, there’s intense action in the field. Including in India.
Market research firms have put Indians among the biggest users and holders of cryptocurrency. Several cryptocurrency exchanges – which allow you to trade in cryptocurrency, and even use them to purchase goods & services – have emerged in India, and most are doing phenomenal business. Coin-DCX became India’s first cryptocurrency unicorn in August when the exchange raised $90 million from investors. Coinswitch Kuber hit 10 million registered users in September, just 15 months from launch, making it perhaps the biggest exchange in India.
Blockchain3

Building these exchanges requires a lot of software and engineering talent. Staffing firm Xpheno estimates there are more than 10,000 active job openings currently in the cryptocurrency segment in India. Even global exchanges are coming to India for talent. Nasdaq-listed Coinbase is establishing a technology facility in Hyderabad. Pankaj Gupta, Coinbase’s VP engineering and site lead for India, blogged in July about how India is seeing a boom in crypto-native talent. He said the company is hiring frontend engineers, data and machine learning engineers, product designers and many more. “These teams in India will be led by local engineering directors, who will have large, independent and autonomous charters. They are being intentionally set up for local decision-making to optimize for impact and velocity,” he wrote.


Exchanges need talent to build, maintain and improve multiple components. They need user-interface designers and front-end engineers to build a visually appealing application that is also simple and seamless to use, more so since users are new to crypto. They need engineers to build a trading engine that can quickly match buyers and sellers, and enable immediate transactions. They need to provide a variety of ways for people to use their cryptocurrency – not just as investment, but also for, say, payments (Unocoin allows users to recharge their Fastag, make bill payments). This requires building those interconnections.

They need to enable wallets for users to keep their cryptocurrency. They need to provide extremely high levels of security. The whole transaction system is typically built on a blockchain network, and while that provides for a lot of trust and security, blockchains have been hacked.
Exchange responsibilities

Avinash Shekhar, co-CEO of Zeb-Pay, says the talent around crypto deposit infrastructure is turning out to be a key requirement. “The exchanges have three responsibilities. One, if you are depositing Bitcoin from somewhere, we should have an automated system that takes this into account. The transaction typically happens on blockchain infrastructure. Two, as exchanges can be hacked, you need infrastructure to keep it safe. Three, when you place a withdrawal request, it needs to be processed in an automated manner – again using a blockchain infrastructure that is secure enough. Crypto engineers need to understand every block in the chain and how the data moves. There’s great demand for a blockchain engineer with an understanding of blockchain security, platforms, architecture, and standards.,” he said.

Ashish Singhal, founder of Coinswitch Kuber, says they look for skills in problem solving, product development, data, engineering, and security. The blockchain industry, he says, is putting a new face to security, but blockchain security talent has not evolved in India. “We had to go to Israel and the US for security experts,” he says.

Another major evolving area is smart contracts, built on the Ethereum blockchain network. These are collections of code that carry out a set of instructions when certain pre-stated conditions are met. These contracts, which make tampering of transactions impossible, are powering decentralised applications. Ethereum is also what has enabled the rise of NFTs (non-fungible tokens), which are digital assets designed to represent ownership of unique virtual items.

Sathvik Vishwanath, CEO & co-founder of Unocoin, says smart contracts allow users to create decentralised financing protocols, create NFTs, create automatically executing escrow contracts.

Nischal Shetty, founder of WazirX, says smart contracts have created good demand for developers specialising in Solidity, the programming language preferred for smart contracts. He says developers familiar with Python will find it easy to learn Solidity as they have similar syntax.


Almost every company in the business is expanding. ZebPay’s head of HR, Geetika Mehta, says they plan to raise headcount from 220 now – of which 30% are engineers – to 400-450 in 6-9 months. WazirX had 35 employees in January; it’s now 300.

Coinswitch Kuber’s Singhal said they have grown to 350 people, from 20 last year, and they expect to be a 1,500-strong team by the end of the 2021-22 financial year. “A third of the talent will be engineers, specialising in data, security, and solving complex engineering problems,” he says.

Lam’s India engineers build complex chip fab machines

 Lam’s India engineers build complex chip fab machines

TNN | Oct 6, 2021, 07.59 AM IST
Lam’s India engineers build complex chip fab machines
Lam Research may not be as known in the semiconductor sector as those like Intel, AMD or Samsung. But the capital equipment that it provides to chip fabrication facilities enable the manufacture of some of the most advanced semiconductors. “We’re probably the world’s most underappreciated company responsible for critical output,” says Rangesh Raghavan, corporate VP and general manager at Lam Research India.

Lam Research has a large presence in India, with over half of the R&D resources of the company based out of its offices here. So the work done out of India has a huge impact on the firm’s capabilities. The research done here is what allows the machines used to make the world’s chips run. Lam is also building a new state-of-the-art lab in Bengaluru which should be ready by the middle of next year and which will more than double its footprint.

“On the software side, some of the engineering work that our people do here is actually very sophisticated. They enable precision control in our machines. The machines are extremely expensive and therefore have to run flawlessly,” says Raghavan.

On the hardware side, Lam India hires a lot of mechanical engineers and material scientists who design components that have to be used in very chemically aggressive environments. They also have robotic experts who help design methods to load and transfer semiconductor wafers with perfect precision every time.

Raghavan says one of the product groups the India centre is best known for is the one involved in deposition systems. “A major shift that has occurred in the semiconductor industry is the switch from 2D architecture to 3D. Instead of just shrinking everything (like transistors), we can fit more by building vertically (stacking dies on top of each other and interconnecting them). This vertical flip has particularly played to Lam’s strengths because our core technologies are able to deposit and pattern the films correctly,” he says.


Here, one of the responsibilities Lam’s India team had was to develop a new product that would enable deposition of a low resistivity film for 3D NAND applications. “The team was responsible for the design, development, and integration of the key mechanical, electrical, and software systems for this module. This equipment’s stateof-the-art gas distribution and delivery technology were critical to the success of the application. The topnotch design ensured a high-quality product developed in record time, keeping up with our customer expectations,” says Raghavan. In order to develop the product, the team needed to have experts in the fields of systems integration, fluid and gas delivery, electrical distribution and controls, and thermal competencies.


Computer science, communications most lucrative

Printed from

Computer science, communications most lucrative
TNN | Oct 6, 2021, 07.44 AM IST

Prof Debabrata Das, director of IIIT-Bangalore, says the engineering fields of computer science and communications are certain to stay the most lucrative in the coming years because of the job opportunities in the fields.
“Demand for computer science, data science and communication science has gone up, apart from interdisciplinary subjects such as robotics, mechatronics, and biomedical engineering,” he says. Mechatronics is the branch of engineering that focuses on the integration of electronic and electrical engineering systems, apart from robotics, computer science and telecommunications.

Das’s own work has been in the field of computer networking, mainly on broadband wireless network, 5G and 6G, and medium access control protocol (MACP). MACP protocols enforce a methodology to allow multiple devices access to a shared media network.

“If two of us communicate at the same time with the same wi-fi and the medium is wireless, both will have the same frequency and will collide. How the machine will intelligently understand this without talking to each other is what MACP is about,” he says.

Das adds that such communications will gain more importance in the Industrial 4.0 world, where industrial devices communicate with each other. “You probably need about 700 billion IoT devices for the 7 billion population in the next 15 years, and these will be communicating in the cloud, and storing information. This will also result in a change in the protocols that carry the information for efficient routing,” he says.

To become an expert in the subject, he suggests a better understanding of how the internet works, in depth understanding of heterogeneous system communication, and conversion of wireless communication to optical communication. For that, he says, students need to be good in mathematics, probability, computer networking, signal processing and mobile architecture.

But he is concerned about the state of engineering education in India. “Engineering schools have improved due to the support from UGC, but that is not enough. Most schools need to improve with two mandates: being atmanirbhar, and improving skills of students.”

He also suggests starting individual and group projects at the UG level that give students more exposure to the world of technology. His views mirror that of Hari Balakrishnan, professor of computer science at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, who compared it to being an apprentice. “Research is best learnt in a way one becomes an electrician – not just theory, but you learn by doing it,” he had told Times Techies.

Students, Das says, should also learn to communicate, show proficiency in technical writing and know how to speak. “Also, face success and failure with the same gusto. Nobody takes failure seriously these days,” he says.

Wednesday, September 22, 2021

Engineering, management students under AICTE to be tested for learning levels, employability

Through this assessment, for the first time, tech education council will test students while they're studying instead of after graduation, to identify lacunae and redress them.
KRITIKA SHARMA 22 September, 2021 8:57 am IST





New Delhi: For the first time, the All India Council for Technical Education (AICTE) is set to measure the learning levels of engineering as well as management students during the course of their studies, ThePrint has learnt.

The move is the result of earlier findings of skill assessment reports, which have shown, among other things, that Indian engineers lack new-age tech skills.

The AICTE’s Student Learning Assessment project will test management students on skills like ability in planning and organising human, financial and physical resources. For engineering, the skills tested will be in emerging areas like blockchain technology and artificial intelligence, core engineering knowledge, and basic knowledge of maths, physics and chemistry. Mental and social abilities of both sets of students will also be measured.

The assessment will be conducted online for all branches of engineering and management across all AICTE-affiliated colleges in India and is set to begin soon, officials at the council told ThePrint.

Through this assessment, the council plans to gauge the learning level of a student during the course, identify lacunae, and redress them. The assessment will also help judge the employability of students, officials said, adding that students will be assessed through questionnaires according to their year of study.

AICTE member Secretary Rajive Kumar told ThePrint: “We want to identify the learning gaps among students at various stages, and take corrective measures. This assessment is not just open to students, but we are asking institutes to extend it to teachers as well, so that they know how to improve the teaching quality.”

Shocking employability statistics

Though there have been employability assessments in the past like the ‘India Skills Report’ released annually, in association with the AICTE, Confederation of Indian Industries (CII) and other private agencies, an assessment while students are still enrolled has not been undertaken yet.

Over the years, the India Skills Report has highlighted shocking employability statistics on Indian graduates. The 2021 report, for example, shows that the employability of B.E./B.Tech. graduates has declined over the years. According to the 2015 report, 54 per cent of graduates were employable, but the number came down to 46.8 per cent in 2021.

The idea of conducting a pan-India assessment on engineering and management students came after a study on a small number of institutions was undertaken by Stanford University two years ago under a World Bank-funded project, the Technical Education Quality Improvement Programme (TEQIP). The study focused on students from 167 institutions from India and compared their learning levels to those in China, Russia, and other nations.

While the complete report of the Stanford study is still awaited, sources said the preliminary findings show that Indian students fare better than their counterparts from China and Russia in terms of their learning abilities when they reach senior classes.

“After the Stanford University study, an internal committee suggested that we should do a larger study for our institutes by ourselves. It will not just help us assess students but the institutes can also take corrective measures, like appointing a new faculty member if students are facing problems with a subject, try a different teaching approach among other measures,” an AICTE official added.

(Edited by Paramita Ghosh)

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