From People+AI to Open Cloud Compute Jarvis Labs, and more, Indian startups are pouring in their resources to make AI for all
(From left): Tanuj Bhojwani, head, People+ai; Tanvi Lall, director of strategy, People+ai; Vishnu Subramanian, founder, Jarvis Labs
Image: Selvaprakash Lakshmanan for Forbes India
About 10 years ago, Tanuj Bhojwani was a tad ahead of his times in trying to build a drone-based services startup. Back then, instead of the regulatory support that’s coming together now, there was scepticism and even suspicion, and therefore the startup folded eventually.
The experience got Bhojwani thinking about “who’s had more success with the government,” and people in his professional networks pointed him to an ecosystem of public-private tech solutions that Nandan Nilekani was evangelising, which today we know as India’s digital public infrastructure (DPI).
Bhojwani, also an alumnus of IIT Bombay like Nilekani, got involved, starting around 2016, and got an insider’s view of what population-scale tech platforms and solutions could look like—and built differently from the VC-funded startup model. (Through Covid, he and Nilekani even teamed up on a book, titled The Art of Bitfulness, about how not to get overwhelmed by our digital gadgets—nothing to do with DPI.)
And then ChatGPT happened. Bhojwani got it to write an essay on India Stack (Aadhaar, UPI, e-KYC, Digilocker, direct benefit transfer and so on), and shared it with Nilekani and a few others he’d come to know through the DPI work. “Hire this bot,” replied Nilekani, tongue-in-cheek.
(This story appears in the 04 October, 2024 issue of Forbes India. To visit our Archives, click here.)