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TRW's technology initiative
By P. Vikram Reddy
HYDERABAD, AUG. 18. The U.S. based $17 billion TRW, which is into
automotive systems and information technology, aeronautical
systems, and space and electronics, has taken up a major
technology initiative in ten different areas referred to as `Tech
bank', and plans to create separate companies or joint ventures
across the globe in the next couple of years in these areas.
The ten areas include advanced technology chip called
`Indiumphosphide', high beam laser, information systems and
integration. It already has a joint venture with Satyam called
the Satyam Manufacturing Technology Inc (SMTI) in information
systems, broad software development, engineering and e-business
services.
The U.S. slowdown has not affected an approximate $200 million
business that TRW intends to channel through the SMTI over a five
year period till 2005, according to Dr. Mostafa Mehrabani, Vice-
President and Chief Information Officer (CIO) of TRW, and Dr.
Keshab Panda, CEO of SMTI.
Dr. Mehrabani, who was here on a visit to Satyam Technology
Centre (STC), on Friday, also provides strategic inputs to
Microsoft and Dell Computers as a member of the executive
advisory board of the two companies. In fact, TRW is also the
only other company where Mr. Bill Gates has worked.
The SMTI, which at present has about 250 people, is discussing
with TRW the possibility of `transfer (not sale)' of TRW's North
American data centre for maintenance. However they were not in a
position to disclose further details, they said.
Dr. Mehrabani said TRW, which has a presence in 35 countries
through 230 locations, was looking at commercialising the ten
technology initiatives. In Indiumphosphide, TRW has the fastest
chip in the world, he says, and they are now looking at new
applications for it. However they were not looking at another
company in India. Unlike other tie-ups where it was a customer
relationship, in the case of Satyam it was a `partnership
relationship', and they were not looking at anything beyond SMTI
in India. TRW in fact shares plans and strategies and takes
advantage of Satyam's capabilities, he said.
While the automotive segment contributed about 64 per cent of
TRW's global business, information systems added was $3 billion.
Dr. Mehrabani said there has been an impact of the U.S. slowdown
on its automotive segment, but not on aeronautical systems and
space and electronics.
TRW's areas of concern includes technology simplification, and
its strategic thrust is on information transparency.
With explosion of Internet, there was intense need to make use of
`zero latency enterprise', that is, information at fingertips, he
pointed out.
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