Category: Technology

  • Anupam Sengupta jumps aboard AI dub firm  Camb.ai

    Anupam Sengupta jumps aboard AI dub firm Camb.ai

    MUMBAI: Anupam Sengupta, a seasoned tech heavyweight with a CV that reads like a who’s who of global giants, has taken the helm as business head for the Indian subcontinent and southeast Asia at Camb.ai. This AI media tech company, fresh from a $11m funding round and eyeing a cool $75m+ by FY26, is betting big on Sengupta’s knack for driving high-impact deals and digital transformations.

    Sengupta, whose past conquests include stints at Sony Group, WPP, Zee, and Standard Chartered, isn’t just bringing his Rolodex; he’s bringing a vision. Camb.ai, based in west Asia, aims to bridge linguistic divides with AI that’s more than just a translator – it’s a cultural chameleon. It has positioned itself as the world’s most capable speech and translation AI, offering the capability for humankind to dub content into over 140 languages using proprietary AI models.

    Camb.ai  founder & CEO Avneesh Prakash articulated the company’s mission with a touch of the poetic: “As founders with deep Indian roots, we’ve seen how language can both empower and exclude. At Camb.ai, our mission is to bridge India’s linguistic diversity through advanced AI, ensuring equal access across entertainment, sports, education, and healthcare. With India and SEA emerging markets central to our strategy, we’re excited to build long-term, transformative impact.”

    Sengupta himself is equally bullish, stating, “At Camb.ai, we are pushing the frontiers of AI voice and language research—not merely translating words, but carrying emotion, intent, contextuality, and cultural nuance across languages. It’s a deeply challenging science, but one with immense potential across sectors. In these transformative times, I’m excited to build this deep tech business grounds up in Asia. Together the team is deeply committed to building long-term, sustainable value in this region where language inclusion can further unlock true cultural and economic potential.”

    In essence, Sengupta’s appointment isn’t just a career move; it’s a strategic play in Asia’s burgeoning AI landscape. Camb.ai is betting that his expertise will translate into more than just revenue; it’ll translate into a cultural revolution, one perfectly nuanced AI voice at a time.

  • “The future depends on how we will balance AI and ML with ethical considerations:” Emmy sound design winner Cory Choy

    “The future depends on how we will balance AI and ML with ethical considerations:” Emmy sound design winner Cory Choy

    He is an award-winning sound guy. Sound as in reliable; sound as in to do with audio. Cory Choy and his boutique sound studio Silver Sound Studio, located in the heart of New York City, have made a name for themselves, which is the envy of many others.

    Silver Sound boasts an Emmy award-winning team of on-location sound recordists in New York and Los Angeles. Choy himself picked up the lovely golden lady for his work mixing the sound for a show “Born To Explore.”

    His studio provides recording, design, edit, restoration and mix services and has worked with all sorts of people all over the globe including, but not limited to: ABC, NBC, Vice, Comedy Central, ESPN, Disney, Google, Microsoft, CNN, MTV, FOX, Netflix, Apple, Shudder and Spotify.

    In a wide-ranging interview, the Emmy Award-winning sound artist, engineer and studio owner discusses the evolution of audio technology, creative freedom, and the intersection of art and social responsibility. Here are the key insights from his conversation with Indiantelevision.com group CEO and publisher Mishaal Wanvari.

    On what sparked his interest in sound design.

    It was an inevitability rather than a decision. Both my parents were musicians – my mother wrote plays and operas, while my father combined music with computer programming. One of my earliest memories is watching my mother’s opera being performed at the Kennedy Center. But it was my father who showed me how technology could amplify creativity. He connected a Midi output from the game Monkey Island through a Casio keyboard, making it sound like a full orchestra. He connected a midi through a keyboard with a massive and professional instrument sound bank– which was far superior to the stock soundcard midi instruments. That early demonstration showed me how technology could be used to bring people together… the midi experience taught me that looking for a unique solution and setups can bring great power and creates experiences far beyond what people expect.

    On the evolution of sound editing tech during his career.

    I started at the very end of physical tape editing, where you had to physically cut and splice tape together. There was no undo button – once you made a cut, you had to live with it. The transition to digital audio workstations was revolutionary. Suddenly, all your tape was right in front of you, you could cut anywhere, and if you made a mistake, you could simply undo it.

    The economics were equally transformative. In 2006, a professional Pro Tools system cost around $10,000 – might as well have been a million to me at the time. But then Dell provided affordable, powerful hardware, and I discovered Reaper, which cost just $60. With a $2,500 Dell computer and Reaper, we were competing with studios using much more expensive equipment. Reaper vs. Avid – every single line of code in reaper is very well thought through with a small team, it is very efficient, and the entire program is designed to empower the user not restrict it. There is more freedom and there are more possibilities in Reaper than any other program I have ever used.

    On his Emmy Award win and on his experience thereafter.

    We won it in 2016 for the programme Born to Explore. One of our most impressive achievements was capturing crystal-clear dialogue from a host 200 feet away on a lake, using a highly directional Sanken CS-3E microphone. The water’s surface actually helped carry the sound. What made it special for us was that we won it in a category that is extremely competitive.

    On his Aisha win at the Tribeca film festival.

    It’s a fascinating story that began with an intern application. Fayshyo Aluko, a Nigerian poet with no sound experience, applied for an internship. When I asked why she wanted to work in sound, she simply said she wanted to explore sound design. I gave her a poem I’d written about a Palestinian girl, inspired by my own daughter’s questions about human rights.

    What Fayshyo brought to it was extraordinary – she incorporated traditional Nigerian storytelling techniques, using an oil drum beat as a metaphor for both footsteps and heartbeats. Her first-ever sound design piece won at the Tribeca Festival. It went on to win a Signal Award and an Anthem Award for human rights work.

    On the industry’s relationship with technology.

    The accessibility of technology has been revolutionary. When I started, a gigabyte of storage was massive – Pro Tools required one gigabyte just to install. Compare that to Reaper, which was just two megabytes. The difference? Avid spent their programming efficiency on creating paywalls – $50 here, $100 there, some plugins over $5,000.

    But now, with affordable computers and software, small studios can compete with anyone. Though the challenge isn’t doing the work – it’s finding it. If you’re not in the elite class, convincing someone from that class to work with you is the real challenge.

    On what’s next for sound design and sound mixing.

    We’re at an interesting inflection point with AI and machine learning. The technology is incredibly powerful, but we need to consider the ethical implications. For instance, voice cloning technology could be used for scams or misinformation. The wealth gap in computing power also means some will have access to these tools while others won’t.

    The future of our industry will depend on how we balance these technological capabilities with ethical considerations. It’s not just about what we can do, but what we should do.

    AI is both enabling and potentially corrupting. It’s incredible for tasks like analysing a voice and removing unwanted noise, but it also raises ethical concerns. We can now make someone sound like they’re saying something they never said, with their exact voice. While that’s exciting from a creative standpoint, it’s concerning from an ethical one.

    I have mixed feelings about the cloud-based AI tools emerging in our industry. Tools like Eleven Labs are incredibly powerful, but they raise important questions about access and control. What happens if these services suddenly become restricted based on geography or politics? It’s similar to the wealth gap we’re seeing in computing power – those with access to unlimited energy and graphics cards will have more capabilities than others.

    What’s fascinating is watching how different regions approach these challenges. Chinese engineers, for instance, are often outwitting their American counterparts with fewer resources. It’s not just about having the most powerful tools – it’s about how creatively you use what you have.

    On the way forward for small studios in a competitive market.

    The tools have never been more accessible, but the challenge is standing out in an increasingly crowded space. There are billions of talented people in the world, everyone has something unique to bring to the table, and the competition is fierce while resources are limited.

    However, I believe independent studios have an advantage in being more nimble and able to take creative risks. The key is finding your unique voice and the audience that resonates with it. It won’t be the easiest path, but if you really want to be in this space, you absolutely can make it work.

    And yes, the model has changed completely. At Silver Sound, we’ve evolved from a partnership to a more focused operation. The pandemic really took a chainsaw to the industry in 2020 – many partners and staff left, and we weren’t sure we’d survive. But then I met our current studio manager and latest engineer, both in their 20s, and it gave us new direction.

    Now our mission is to help develop new talent while remaining economically sustainable. We want to create things that make both us and the world better, but in a way that supports everyone financially. It’s about finding that balance between artistic integrity and commercial viability.

    The hardest part isn’t doing the work – it’s finding it. If someone gives me a project and appropriate funding, we can create something extraordinary. The challenge is breaking through that class ceiling where elite-level clients don’t trust smaller studios with significant projects.

    That said, I believe boutique studios have advantages in today’s market. We can be more responsive, take creative risks, and maintain closer relationships with clients. The key is finding clients who value that personal touch and creative freedom over the prestige of a large studio name.

    On his feature film.

    Sound and music are integral to my film Esme, My Love – you really won’t understand the movie without them. We made it for $135,000 total, yet people think we spent £3 million. That was only possible because we had Silver Sound as a home base. It’s now being dubbed into Spanish and Portuguese, with Korean potentially next.

    It’s still an independent gem – not widely known in the United States or globally – but I’m proud that it got distribution. You can find it on Amazon and Tubi. We spent six years working on it, ensuring it didn’t feel like something just slapped together.”

    On his approach keeping in mind the technical versus creative aspects of sound design.

    Technical precision is only a means to an end – creative decision-making is everything. If you don’t have the technical ability to execute your creative vision, then you need to improve technically. The more technical ability you have, the better you understand what’s creatively possible. They feed off each other.

    We offer two modes at Silver Sound: we can either help someone achieve their vision to its highest level possible, or we can work with them to create a vision from scratch. People come to us because they know our technical work is solid, but we provide a creative aspect that many other companies can’t match.

    On how technology vendors have evolved in service.

    I’m particularly grateful to Dell, and this isn’t just corporate speak. In New York City, their ProSupport service has been invaluable. When a computer breaks down in a professional studio, having a skilled repair technician on-site within 24 hours is extraordinary. Finding a reliable repair person independently could take a month.

    However, I’m watching carefully how technology companies position themselves during these challenging times. We need companies that empower creators rather than restrict them. The best technology partners understand they’re enabling creativity, not just selling hardware.

    On what excites him most about the industry’s future.

    The democratisation of technology has opened up incredible possibilities. When I started, the barrier to entry was hundreds of thousands of dollars. Now, with a decent computer and some affordable software, talented creators can produce professional-quality work.

    But what really excites me is seeing how younger generations approach these tools. They’re not bound by traditional workflows or assumptions. They’re combining technologies in ways we never imagined, creating new forms of storytelling. The challenge will be maintaining high creative standards while embracing these new possibilities.

    On advice for aspiring sound designers.

    Do what you love, but understand the economic realities. Unless you join a large company, it’s not an easy path financially. You can live a good life as a sound mixer and designer, but if you’re independent, you need to be a business person as well. If that’s not your strength, find a business partner who can handle that aspect while you focus on the creative work. The competition is fierce and resources are limited, but if you truly want to be in this space, you absolutely can make it work.

    On his belief that media has social responsibility and his willingness to remind it of it.

    Many companies are afraid to take moral stances for fear of alienating potential clients. This year, I’ve made a conscious business decision to openly oppose fascist movements in America. Yes, we might lose some potential clients, but I believe we’ll attract more of the kind of clients we want to work with. You can be moral and ethical, but if you can’t feed your family, it’s no good. However, I don’t want to survive in a way where my soul isn’t surviving.

  • Experian report highlights Generative AI’s growing role in fraud attacks

    Experian report highlights Generative AI’s growing role in fraud attacks

    MUMBAI: Experian, has released its latest research, offering insights into how Generative AI (GenAI) is reshaping the fraud landscape. Conducted by Forrester Consulting, the study surveyed 449 senior fraud protection professionals across multiple countries, including India, uncovering a surge in fraud losses due to identity theft and the critical need for AI-driven security measures.

    The report highlights a shift from individual fraudsters to organised crime syndicates, with GenAI accelerating this transformation. In India, 85 per cent of businesses agree that GenAI has permanently altered the fraud landscape, making attacks more complex. The rapid industrialisation of fraud enables criminals to mass-produce deepfakes, synthetic identities, and large-scale scams. Alarmingly, 50 per cent of firms struggle to detect GenAI-driven fraud or quantify its financial impact. To counter this, businesses must implement AI-powered fraud prevention tools, adopt integrated security measures, and enhance fraud orchestration strategies to bolster detection and reduce costs.

    As fraud tactics evolve, businesses are recognising the need for external collaboration and advanced fraud prevention technologies. In India, 77 per cent of fraud decision-makers stress that partnerships with external organisations are vital for tackling fraud effectively. Additionally, 61 per cent support data-sharing consortia as an effective method for tracking emerging fraud trends. Encouragingly, 74 per cent of Indian firms report a positive return on investment from participating in such initiatives, underlining the benefits of collective action.

    The study underscores the importance of integrating diverse data sources into supervised and unsupervised Machine Learning (ML) models to enhance fraud detection. However, 48 per cent of Indian firms struggle with ML implementation due to a lack of training data, while 60 per cent cite poor data quality as a barrier. Developing in-house ML models is complex, making customisable, off-the-shelf ML solutions a faster and more effective alternative.

    Experian India country managing director Manish Jain commented, “At Experian, we are committed to staying ahead of emerging threats by leveraging advanced technology, data analytics, and industry consortia. Our ML-based tools, such as the Mule Risk Indicator, integrate traditional and non-traditional data points to help financial institutions identify and mitigate fraud. By promoting these advanced solutions, we empower businesses to navigate an increasingly complex fraud landscape while ensuring data security.”

    Experian EMEA & APAC chief operating officer Shail Deep, added, “The integration of ML-driven fraud prevention is no longer optional our research shows that 85 per cent of fraud experts believe GenAI has fundamentally altered the threat landscape, with over 52 per cent reporting increased fraud losses in the past year. Businesses must act now by adopting flexible, cutting-edge fraud prevention tools. At Experian, we remain focused on innovation, ensuring our technology continues to strengthen detection capabilities and create a safer digital environment for clients and consumers alike.”

     

  • Cloudtv and Mediatek join forces to transform India’s smart TV OS market

    Cloudtv and Mediatek join forces to transform India’s smart TV OS market

    MUMBAI: Cloudtv, has announced a strategic partnership with global chipset solutions provider Mediatek. This collaboration aims to revolutionise the connected TV operating system market in India by offering fully compliant Android-based TV OS solutions.

    By integrating Cloudtv OS with Mediatek’s advanced System-on-a-Chip (SoC) technology, Indian TV brands and OEMs will benefit from a streamlined integration process, significantly reducing both costs and time to market. The partnership is expected to accelerate Cloudtv’s growth, potentially doubling its market share in the country’s expanding smart TV sector.

    Cloudtv has also confirmed that its OS is now fully compliant with Android Compatibility Test Suite (CTS) standards, ensuring a seamless and consistent user experience. Additionally, it enables access to a wide range of free-to-air channels, offering high-quality digital content including news, sports, and entertainment, without the need for subscriptions or contracts.

    Key benefits of this partnership include,

    – Android CTS compliance guaranteed compatibility with Google’s standards for a seamless viewing experience.

    – Android 14 support enhanced security, improved performance, and access to the latest features.

    – Free-to-air channels DVBS-2 compliant technology providing cost-free access to diverse content.

    – Pre-certified applications instant access to platforms like YouTube, Prime Video, and JioHotstar, along with 200+ content partners.

    “By integrating Mediatek’s cutting-edge chipsets with Cloudtv’s localized OS expertise, we are revolutionizing the Indian connected TV industry. This partnership will forge the way for an end-to-end solution that makes premium television experiences more affordable and accessible than ever before. For TV brands, this marks a game-changing opportunity, enabling them to offer competitively priced smart TVs with certified OS and apps, breaking past the limitations of high-cost models. Through this partnership, we hope to drive greater innovation and accessibility that helps shape the future of smart TV adoption in India.” Cloudtv COO & co-founder Abhijeet Rajpurohit.

  • Danish firm Milestone launches video data platform for coders to train AI models

    Danish firm Milestone launches video data platform for coders to train AI models

    MUMBAI: In a world where AI developers are positively gagging for decent video data, Danish surveillance heavyweight Milestone Systems is stepping into the breach. The Copenhagen-based firm unveiled Project Hafnia today, a new platform that promises to democratise AI model training by serving up high-quality, legally kosher video data to hungry developers.

    Milestone’s new offering leverages Nvidia’s tech stack to create what it hopes will be a knockout service for both data generators keen to monetise their footage and developers desperate for properly annotated video data that won’t land them in regulatory hot water.

    “Artificial intelligence is our generation’s biggest game-changer,” says Milestone Systems  chief executive Thomas Jensen. “The Project Hafnia platform will collect and curate data with the aspiration to be the world’s smartest, fastest and responsible platform for video data and training of AI models.”

    The firm is rolling out two distinct services:

    * A cutting-edge “training as a service” offering where coders can access quality data to train their AI models
    * A visual language model (VLM) service for smart city transport applications, which the company boldly claims will be “industry leading”

    Milestone reckons its platform, powered by Nvidia’s Cosmos Curator data curation tools, will speed up AI and analytics development by up to 30 times compared with current standards—a claim that will raise eyebrows in the notoriously cautious tech community.

    The first cab off the rank is a transport-focused VLM designed to tackle everything from general traffic assessments to incident reporting and alert validation.

    “The next phase in development and adoption of visually perceptive agentic AI services will be unlocked by recipes like Nvidia VSS blueprint combined with widely available and accessible fine-tuned VLM models,” says NVIDIA vice president and general manager of embedded and edge computing Deepu Talla.

    Project Hafnia launches initially as a pilot, with keen developers able to join a waitlist at hafnia.milestonesys.com/joinwaitlist. The platform will cut its teeth on traffic video data before expanding to other domains once fully operational.

    Founded in 1998 and headquartered in Copenhagen, Milestone employs more than 1,500 people worldwide and has been an independent company in the Canon Group since 2014.

  • Alok Agrawal joins Kapture CX to supercharge strategic account growth

    Alok Agrawal joins Kapture CX to supercharge strategic account growth

    MUMBAI: If customer experience is the new battleground, then Kapture CX just added a heavyweight to its arsenal. Alok Agrawal has officially joined as head of strategic account growth, bringing a proven track record in enterprise product sales, revenue expansion, and customer engagement. With Kapture CX revolutionising customer interactions through Gen AI-powered solutions, Alok’s arrival signals a bold step forward in strengthening client relationships and business growth.

    Agrawal, an alumnus of IIM Calcutta and NIT Tiruchirappalli, steps into this role fresh from Razorpay, where he played a pivotal role in scaling enterprise product sales, driving revenue, and launching industry-first solutions. Before that, he led strategic initiatives at Paytm, where he spearheaded product sales for enterprise solutions and executed go-to-market strategies that helped shape the fintech ecosystem. From fintech to retail to manufacturing, Agrawal has consistently delivered high-impact results across industries.

    At Kapture CX, Agrawal is set to spearhead strategic account growth initiatives, ensuring that AI-driven customer experience solutions don’t just integrate seamlessly into enterprise operations, but also transform the way businesses engage with their customers. His deep understanding of enterprise needs and his forward-thinking approach will help push Kapture CX’s growth to new heights.

    Welcoming Agrawal aboard, Kapture CX CEO & co-founder Sheshgiri Kamath said, “Alok’s appointment comes at an important phase for Kapture CX as we continue to scale and innovate in the customer experience space. His extensive experience in enterprise product sales and revenue expansion will play a crucial role in strengthening our client relationships and ensuring seamless customer journeys.”

    Agrawal himself couldn’t be more excited, “Customers are at the core of every successful business, and I’m excited to contribute to Kapture CX’s mission of enhancing customer experience with smart, seamless solutions. I’m looking forward to working with this energetic team to improve customer interactions and expand into new and existing markets. While we are a young team, the enthusiasm here is infectious, and I’m eager to see what we can accomplish together.”

    With Agrawal’s leadership, Kapture CX is gearing up to deepen its client engagement, refine its AI-powered solutions, and expand its footprint in the customer experience space. The goal? To not just manage customer interactions—but to redefine them.

  • Estée Lauder brushes up digital creativity with Adobe Firefly AI

    Estée Lauder brushes up digital creativity with Adobe Firefly AI

    MUMBAI: The world of beauty is getting a digital makeover as The Estée Lauder Companies (ELC) partners with Adobe to redefine marketing campaigns using Firefly, Adobe’s generative AI suite. By integrating Firefly into its Creative Cloud workflows, ELC aims to speed up campaign execution, empower creative teams, and streamline content production across its prestigious brands, including Mac Clinique, and Jo Malone London.

    With digital campaigns demanding hundreds of thousands of assets yearly, ELC is embracing AI-powered automation to eliminate repetitive tasks and refocus designers on crafting stunning, high-impact visuals. Firefly’s Generative Expand feature will ensure content resizes seamlessly for different digital platforms, enhancing ELC’s Beauty Reimagined strategy, its bold vision to become the world’s most consumer-centric prestige beauty brand.
    “Maintaining mindshare on digital channels such as social media is important in the competitive beauty industry, but oftentimes the content requirements for each platform stresses our ability to deliver new campaigns,” said Mac Cosmetics vice president for global digital creative and brand image Justin Edwards. “The Mac Cosmetics team was the first to explore the potential of generative AI for the company through Adobe Firefly Services, and we believe it will remove hurdles that currently prevent our designers from focusing on their craft.”

    “Adobe Firefly Services APIs surface decades of Adobe innovation across our foundational AI models and applications such as Photoshop and InDesign, to assist with daily tasks that are crucial but can often be repetitive and time-intensive,” said Adobe Genstudio and Firefly for Enterprise general manager Varun Parmar. “The Estée Lauder Companies have shown an incredibly compelling and practical application of generative AI, which allows design teams to focus more time on their craft and ideating eye catching creative for its portfolio of nearly 25 brands.”

    “At The Estée Lauder Companies, we need to keep pace with a changing environment where an increasingly large share of transactions is happening through digital channels such as mobile devices,” said The Estée Lauder Companies vice president for creative center of excellence Yuri Ezhkov. “We have a trusted partner in Adobe to provide generative AI technologies that are safe for commercial use, with tools that enable our design teams to operate more nimbly and be free to focus on ideating.

    Alongside AI adoption, ELC is revamping its Digital Asset Management (DAM) system using Adobe Experience Manager Assets to optimise image storage, search, and performance insights. This upgrade allows for faster content creation and real-time insights, ensuring that campaigns stay ahead of trends in the ever-evolving digital space.

  • Intel chips in with new boss: Veteran semiconductor maestro Tan takes the reins

    Intel chips in with new boss: Veteran semiconductor maestro Tan takes the reins

    MUMBAI:  The Silicon Valley giant that’s been looking for a permanent captain has finally found its new helmsman, as Intel Corp yesterday announced semiconductor veteran Lip-Bu Tan will slide into the chief executive’s chair effective 18 March.

    The appointment ends months of boardroom musical chairs at the chip-making behemoth, with Tan succeeding interim co-CEOs David Zinsner and Michelle Johnston Holthaus.

    Zinsner will remain executive vice president and chief financial officer, and Johnston Holthaus will remain CEO of Intel Products. 

    Frank D. Yeary, who took on the role of interim executive chair of the board during the search for a new CEO, will revert to being the independent chair of the board upon Tan getting his feet under the corner office’s desk.
     
    “Lip-Bu is an exceptional leader whose technology industry expertise, deep relationships across the product and foundry ecosystems, and proven track record of creating shareholder value is exactly what Intel needs in its next CEO,” Yeary said. “Throughout his long and distinguished career, he has earned a reputation as an innovator who puts customers at the heart of everything he does, delivers differentiated solutions to win in the market and builds high-performance cultures to achieve success.

    “Like many across the industry, I have worked closely with Lip-Bu in the past and have seen firsthand how his relentless attention to customers drives innovation and success,” Yeary continued. “We are delighted to have Lip-Bu as our CEO as we work to accelerate our turnaround and capitalise on the significant growth opportunities ahead.”

    The 63-year-old Singapore-born executive, who previously served on Intel’s board before stepping down last August, brings over two decades of semiconductor foreplay to a company desperately seeking to regain its mojo.

    A  longtime technology investor, he has deep relationships across Intel’s ecosystem, having served as CEO Cadence Design Systems from 2009 to 2021, where he led a reinvention of the company and drove a cultural transformation centered on customer-centric innovation. During his time as CEO, Cadence more than doubled its revenue, expanded operating margins and delivered a stock price appreciation of more than 3,200 per cent. 
    Tan served as a member of the Cadence board of directors for 19 years, from his appointment in 2004 through his service as executive chairman from 2021 to 2023 following his tenure as CEO.

    “I am honoured to join Intel as CEO,” said Tan.”I see significant opportunities to remake our business in ways that serve our customers better and create value for our shareholders.”

    “Intel has a powerful and differentiated computing platform, a vast customer installed base and a robust manufacturing footprint that is getting stronger by the day as we rebuild our process technology roadmap,” Tan continued. “I am eager to join the company and build upon the work the entire Intel team has been doing to position our business for the future.”

    Intel’s shares jumped four per cent on the announcement, as investors bet that Tan – who holds a nuclear engineering Master’s from MIT and a physics degree from Nanyang Technological University – has the technical chops to help the company reclaim its crown from rivals like Nvidia and AMD.

  • Danish retail giant Coop extends SAP S/4HANA ERP tech contract with TCS

    Danish retail giant Coop extends SAP S/4HANA ERP tech contract with TCS

     MUMBAI: Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) has bagged a juicy contract extension with Coop Danmark, continuing to power the digital backbone of Denmark’s retail heavyweight across its 900-plus stores.
    The Indian IT behemoth will keep its hands on the technological tiller of Coop’s SAP S/4HANA enterprise resource planning system, a partnership that’s already been cooking for five years. In today’s retail pressure cooker, with penny-pinching shoppers scrutinising every price tag, this digital alliance aims to streamline operations and spruce up customer experiences.

    “We are building the Coop of the future,” declared Coop Danmark CTO Lars Ole. “Our digital transformation must continue if we’re to create a shopping experience that keeps our two million members coming back for more.”

    The collaboration, one of the Nordic region’s most substantial tech implementations, has already standardised business processes throughout Coop’s retail operations. Now the partnership is set to beef up with artificial intelligence and machine learning capabilities while trimming the fat from operating costs.

    TCS retail business head Abhijit Niyogi said: “We are proud to extend our partnership with Coop Danmark and support the critical core function of their retail business.”

    For TCS, this deal is another feather in its Nordic cap, where it currently deploys over 20,000 staff supporting regional heavyweights. The company has clearly not been resting on its laurels, having scooped the #1 spot in customer satisfaction and nabbed a Top Employer award from the Top Employers Institute.

    As supermarket wars intensify across Europe, this technological union seems determined to keep Coop Danmark fighting fit in the battle for increasingly fickle shoppers’ loyalty.

  • Revolutionising business with AI: LS Digital introduces Dataquark

    Revolutionising business with AI: LS Digital introduces Dataquark

    MUMBAI: India’s integrated Digital Business Transformation (DBT) company, LS Digital, has announced the launch of Dataquark, a dedicated business unit aimed at transforming data measurement, analysis, and reporting. This move follows strong demand for the Data & Insights pillar of LS Digital’s DBT framework, prompting the company to establish a distinct identity for this domain. Vinay Tamboli, previously CEO of Data & Insights, will now handle Dataquark as its CEO.

    Inspired by fundamental physics, Dataquark reflects the essential role of data in digital enterprises, akin to quarks forming the foundation of matter. The unit is set to drive strategic growth and AI-led transformation by enabling businesses to unify, process, and activate data.

    LS Digital founder & CEO, Prasad Shejale stated, “In a digital-first world, businesses must go beyond collecting data to fully harness its potential. Dataquark ensures that data is not just a foundational asset but a key driver of business transformation. Just as bringing in Langoor, f1studioz, and Social Panga strengthened our DBT framework, Dataquark will now handle the charge in Data & AI.”

    Dataquark bridges the gap between raw data and actionable intelligence, accelerating AI maturity and delivering measurable business impact. Its approach—“Collect – Collate – Activate”—ensures data integrity, privacy, and large-scale activation. With a comprehensive suite of services, it aims to enhance AI capabilities, optimise marketing effectiveness, and transform data infrastructure.

    Dataquark CEO Vinay Tamboli stated, “As AI evolves, the role of data has never been more critical. Dataquark will integrate AI-driven solutions, advanced analytics, and strategic partnerships to break data silos and accelerate innovation. With increasing demand for privacy-first, AI-ready data solutions, Dataquark is uniquely positioned to meet this need.”

    Dataquark offers four key services to help businesses unlock the full potential of their data. Its marketing data infrastructure integrates first-party data with advertising platforms to drive revenue and conversions. The business data infrastructure connects finance, marketing, operations, and sales through data lakes and advanced engineering, enabling smarter decision-making. Through AI & ML Solutions, Dataquark delivers actionable insights, predicts business KPIs, and automates processes to enhance efficiency. Finally, its Data & AI readiness services prepare organisations for AI adoption by conducting audits, developing strategies, and creating customised playbooks.

    Leveraging strategic partnerships with Google Cloud and Meta, Dataquark is equipped with cutting-edge AI technologies. Its advanced solutions, including Digiverse and partnerships with Aqilliz, Datamorph, and VWO, enable businesses to utilise blockchain-powered data collaboration, predictive analytics, and AI-driven insights.

    By launching Dataquark as a standalone unit, LS Digital underscores its commitment to reshaping how brands interact with data in an AI-driven economy. This initiative is set to empower CXOs in navigating an increasingly complex digital landscape with data as their competitive advantage.