R. K. Baliga

Ram Krishna Baliga (29 December 1929 26 October 1988) is regarded as the father of the Electronics City in Bangalore, India.

Ram Krishna Baliga
Born(1929-12-29)29 December 1929
Died26 October 1988(1988-10-26) (aged 58)
NationalityIndian
Alma materIndian Institute of Science, Bangalore
OccupationFounding Chairman and Managing Director of Keonics (1976-1983), Bangalore, India; Chairman and Managing Director, Hindustan Teleprinters Ltd, Chennai, India (1984-1986); Managing Director, Sandur Fluid Controls Pvt Ltd (1986-1988); Visionary, Industrialist, Electronic engineer, Professor of Management and examiner, Bangalore University (1969-1976)
Known forEnvisioning the Electronic City in Bangalore and other similar cities in Karnataka in 1975
Spouse(s)Shanthi Baliga

Education and career

Ram Krishna Baliga went to Canara High School at Mangalore and completed PUC (Pre University Course) at St. Aloysius College (Mangalore) before he went to College of Engineering, Guindy[1] for B.E. (Elec) Honors. He then completed a master's degree in Power Engineering at Indian Institute of Science as Government of Madras scholar.

While working in the Doctoral Program as Indian Institute of Science Merit scholar he was invited by General Electric to work in their factories in the USA. He worked as Test engineer between 1954-55 at GE. He also worked in Westinghouse Electric Company (1955–1956) and Kaiser Engineers (1956–1959).

He worked as a Project Engineer at National Carbon Company between 1959-1960. In 1960 he joined Manipal Institute of Technology as Professor and Vice-Principal.

Academic role

Baliga was the founding Head of Department of Electrical Engineering and Vice Principal in 1960 of Manipal Institute of Technology.[2]

His philosophy was that an engineer in India should not only be up to date in his field but also be well versed in social sciences. He said that in practical terms any engineer must apply his know-how with an eye to the social, economic, geographic, education and natural resources of his/her country.

Bharat Electronics Limited

He was initially Chief Engineer of Bharat Electronics (1961–1968), Works Manager (1968–1973) and subsequently assumed the role of Deputy General Manager of the Radar Division (1973–1976) before he assumed responsibility of Chairman and Managing Director of Karnataka State Electronics Development Corporation(KEONICS) (July 1976-Feb 1984).

As Chief Engineer of Bharat Electronics, he was responsible for developing the integrated residential colony of the company which consisted of the more than 1400 houses including places of worship of different religions. As the President of BEL Co-operative Housing Society between 1974-1976 he developed another housing colony of 1500 houses.

Electronics City

According to the Indian Express,[3] in the early 1970s Baliga envisioned making Bangalore the "Silicon Valley of India" and it was met with skepticism.[4] However, the then Chief Minister D. Devaraj Urs of Karnataka decided to support him and made him the Chairman of the Karnataka State Electronics Development Corporation (Keonics) in 1976.[3] In 1978 Keonics established Electronics City on 332 acres (1.34 km2) in Konappana Agrahara and Doddathogur Village, near Bangalore.[5] He completed his term as Chairman of Keonics in 1983 during which period he saw the establishment of several firms. The development of the Electronic City gained substantial momentum after India liberalized its economy in early 1990s. According to the Keonics website, Electronics City today houses over 100 information technology and electronics companies who employ over 60,000 personnel.[5]

Hindustan Teleprinters Limited

As Chairman & Managing Director of Hindustan Teleprinters Ltd (1984–1986) he successfully introduced Electronic Teleprinters in India replacing the old outdated model of Electro-Mechanical Teleprinters of 1961 vintage.

Volunteer works

In 1955 he was the President of the International Club at Westing House Electric Corporation, which consisted of members of several nationalities with view of promoting international goodwill among them and US citizens.

He was also president of the Indian Institute of Plant Engineers which has 4000 members according to the Deccan Herald,[6] president of International Club at Westinghouse Electric Corporation (USA),[7] president of Karnataka Productivity Council[3] and President of Rotary Club of Bangalore where he initiated the Burns Ward.[8]

gollark: I'm not convinced you understand what I'm talking about here. 018249 kOffense.
gollark: I see. What of it? That doesn't mean you can get data out, just that you can see roughly where the code for that is.
gollark: Do you mean that decryption code probably has XORs in it, or what?
gollark: What? I mean you can do asymmetric crypto or something.
gollark: With cryptography™, you can make it so that even reverse engineering will not let you get your data back.

References

  1. Vidya Raja (31 July 2018). "India's Oldest Engineering College Turns 225: 6 Alumni Who Have Made Guindy Proud!". The Better India.
  2. Dept of E & E
  3. Indian Express, Bangalore Edition, 6 November 1988
  4. Keonics : Your perfect partner Archived 3 November 2006 at the Wayback Machine
  5. Deccan Herald, 28 October 1988
  6. Times of India, 1 November 1988
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