Hi Friends,

Even as I launch this today ( my 80th Birthday ), I realize that there is yet so much to say and do. There is just no time to look back, no time to wonder,"Will anyone read these pages?"

With regards,
Hemen Parekh
27 June 2013

Now as I approach my 90th birthday ( 27 June 2023 ) , I invite you to visit my Digital Avatar ( www.hemenparekh.ai ) – and continue chatting with me , even when I am no more here physically

Tuesday, 26 August 2025

MakeGPT

 



 

Context :

IIT Madras-incubated Kochadai Technologies launches MakeGPT to build IoT systems with prompts

 

Extract :

IIT Madras Research Park-incubated startup Kochadai Technologies has launched MakeGPT, a tool that can

help people build prototypes simply by using natural language prompts.

MakeGPT was officially unveiled by Dr. Palanivel Thiagarajan, Minister for Information Technology and Digital Services, Government of Tamil Nadu, during the ‘ZeroToOne: GenAI Product Day’ event. 

The toolkit is accessible to non-technical users who can just describe the idea behind their Internet of Things (IoT) system. 

The platform comprises of Natural Language-to-Hardware Interface for :

Ø  Conversational project creation,

Ø  Automated System Generation with component selection,

Ø  Real-Time Design Iteration through dialogue-based design refinement and

Ø  Educational Insight Mode to explain component functionality in context,

a statement released said.

“Imagine telling an AI to ‘create a soil moisture monitoring system that sends alerts to my phone when plants need water’ and receiving a complete prototype with component lists, firmware code, and assembly instructions,” said Naveena Swamy, Founder of Kochadai Technology Solutions

{ naveena@robotechcenter.com / naveenanh@gmail.com / kochadaitech@gmail.com / admin@maxelerator.org / naveena@maxelerator.org /

 

  “That’s the reality MakeGPT delivers today. We’re democratizing hardware innovation for everyone.”

 

Dear Naveena :


Congratulations for what could be a “ Path Breaking Innovation “

From this news report I cannot make out how your MakeGPT would “ democratize hardware innovation for everyone “ , but with Trump’s 50 % tariff on India-made Garments kicking in from today , your innovation could turn out to be that “ Knight in the White Armour “ for our Garment Industry .

If MakeGPT can enable Indian Garment Manufacturers to 3D Print , “ Custom-made / Personalized / Stitch-less “ garments ( even one UNIQUE piece at a time , as designed by any customer from any corner of the World , using a GARMENT SELECT AI-ENABLED MOBILE APP ), then we could beat the garment industries of Bangladesh – Philippines – Indonesia

 

Please take a look at my following suggestions and do let me know what you think

 

With regards,

Hemen Parekh

www.HemenParekh.ai  /  www.IndiaAGI.ai  /  www.My-Teacher.in  /  27 Aug 2025

 

My Suggestions :

Ø  HOW FAR SHOULD WE SEE ?  …………………………………… 15 Feb 2016

 

Extract :

And then what would happen to such automated garment-making assembly lines when people install 3D Printing Machines in their homes ? - machines that can print garments as per designs downloaded from Net  ?

 

Ø  Tech World turning imagination real  ………………………… 23 Feb 2016

 

Extract :

A BBC TV report last evening talked about the Chinese Manufacturers having developed machines that can carry out traditional Indian " Chikankari " embroidery on a saree within one hour what takes poor women of Lucknow, close to a hundred hours 

 

And they are dumping these sarees in the Indian Market at one fourth the price  !

 

Some 5 lakh poor women in UP are in danger of being obsolete !

 

DIPP is planning to equip some 100 " Innovation Centres " at University Campuses across India , with 3D printers

 

How about some Indian Start Up developing a technology to 3D Print " Chikankari " sarees and make these software / hardware available to these poor women, to beat the Chinese at their own game ?  :

 

 

Ø  Congratulations, Ashwini Vaishnawji……………………………. 23 Feb 2022

 

Extract :

Dear Shri Piyush Goyalji,

Here is how 3D Printing industry, should be developed to boost exports :

 { A }  Exporting SOFTWARE for 3 D printing

Ø  Indian software geeks can design / develop 3D printing software at ONE TENTH what it would cost a US – EU – JAPANESE company to develop it in-house, in their own countries. They would prefer to outsource such software to Indians

Sitting in their homes with their own ( scale model ) 3D printing machines, these Indians would give a demo of the software developed, to their foreign clients, using ZOOM – Google Meet ( holograms, at a future date ), - before emailing it

{ B }  Exporting COMPONENTS manufactured in India, using 3D Printing

This is a case where a Foreign Company has already developed its own 3D printing softwares but do not wish to set up local manufacturing facility in its own country , with all its hassle / manpower / commitments 

 They would like an Indian Company ( with its cost-competitiveness ), to manufacture components using their software ( delivered over internet ) and ship out

I believe, given adequate support / encouragement / incentives / push by the government, this could motivate many Indian Startups to set up 3D PRINTING factories ( with 3D printing machines capable of using a wide variety of Raw Materials such as metals – resins – plastics – even organic compounds etc ) exclusively to cater to foreign clients

 

Ø  Stitch-less ? A Nine Year long wait  ………………………….. 24  Oct  2024

 

Extract :

It is said > A stitch in time, saves nine

I said  “ How about a Stitch-less garment ? “ – but I had to wait for nine years to realize !

Here is that realization :

https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=4654514671353902&ref=sharing

Most innovative breakthrough:

No tailor required... Just feed the yarn in the machine and get the finished dress of your design and that too without stitches “

 

 

 

When the Recent Becomes the Inevitable: Reflections on Institutions, Conflict, and Climate

When the Recent Becomes the Inevitable: Reflections on Institutions, Conflict, and Climate

When the Recent Becomes the Inevitable: Reflections on Institutions, Conflict, and Climate

I have a habit — both a vice and a discipline — of watching patterns rather than single headlines. Over time the headlines stop being isolated shocks and begin to read like chapters of the same book. The past few days have offered that unpleasant clarity: an attempted removal of a central bank governor, renewed violence and civic rupture in Israel and Gaza, and extreme weather that reads like an advance notice of a different planetary rhythm. Each of these items deserves its own grief. Put together, they feel like symptoms of a larger unraveling.

The attempted firing of a Fed governor: a constitutional bruise

When I saw reports that President Trump moved to dismiss Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook — and that her attorney signaled a lawsuit in response — I felt the sort of cold recognition that comes from having watched similar strains before Fed Governor Cook’s attorney says he will file suit over Trump’s attempt to fire her and Firing of Lisa Cook tests SCOTUS’ willingness to limit Trump’s power. This is not only politics; it is constitutional theatre. When executive power reaches into institutions designed to be independent, the loss is not merely procedural — it is civilizational.

Years ago I spoke about how fragile institutional independence could be when norms were eroded one small concession at a time. I offered a practical idea then: strengthen statutory protections for independent appointments, and rebuild internal checks that make simple dismissals legally and politically expensive. Watching this episode today is a strange validation — and a reminder of urgency. The truth of my older argument remains unchanged: whenever we let precedent slide, later crises are manufactured from yesterday’s compromises.

Israel-Gaza: protests, hostages, and the cost of reporting

The scenes from Israel and Gaza have become painfully familiar: mass protests, demands for hostage releases, and a war theatre that continues to punish civilians and reporters alike Protesters in Israel demand hostage release, end to Gaza war. What haunts me most is the specific vulnerability of those who try to tell the story. Journalists are dying while doing what democracies depend upon — bearing witness Journalists among dead in Israeli strikes on Gaza hospital.

I have long argued — and not quietly — that protecting the space for truth-telling is not a luxury. It is a basal component of public life. I warned years ago that when societies stop protecting truth-tellers, they lose their capacity to correct themselves. Seeing reporters become casualties is confirmation of that earlier warning. The logic is morbidly simple: silence the witnesses, and the wrongs become harder to see and harder to resist.

Climate and weather: the slow burn and the sudden wall of dust

It is tempting to treat climate as a distant, abstract problem while responding urgently to the political crisises of the day. But the planet refuses such compartmentalization. Scientists note that the long-term loss of Arctic sea ice has slowed only temporarily — a pause, not a remedy Arctic Sea Ice Loss Slows Temporarily. Meanwhile, cities like Phoenix are being taught new weather vocabulary: towering haboobs that disrupt airports, topple infrastructure, and make clear that extreme events are the new norm Haboob slams Phoenix with a towering wall of dust, causing damage, airport delays and power outages.

Several years back I argued for dual tracks: rapid adaptation to the shocks already baked into the system, and renewed investment in mitigation to limit future shocks. The logic then was against the grain; now it reads merely realistic. This feels like another small vindication, but it also makes me impatient. Predictions are not trophies — they are calls to action that we failed to answer.

The politics of administrative power and the quiet reclaiming of public capacity

One of the subtler stories running beneath today’s headlines is about how we equip — or disempower — the machinery of government. There is a fascinating chorus of arguments now that bureaucracy could be the thing that saves liberal democracy if it is rebuilt with intention Make Bureaucracy Great Again. I raised a similar point years ago: when the administrative state is competent and insulated from political caprice, it becomes the strongest defense against authoritarian drift.

This connects back to the Fed episode. Protecting institutions is not a conservative or liberal hobby. It is the structural necessity of any polity that hopes to survive its own crises. I tried, years ago, to outline frameworks for professionalizing key agencies and re-legislating appointment safeguards. Watching the present, I feel again that early blueprint’s quiet relevance. The same is true for how we defend data and public infrastructure from private capture; commentators in places like The Walrus and elsewhere are now articulating the same problem with fresh evidence Who Owns Canada’s Labour Data? (Hint: Not Canada).

A final, stubborn human note

Newsrooms, courts, and coastlines are not separate in the human sense. Each headline contains people who will live with the consequences for years. There is a humility that comes from predicting outcomes and then seeing them arrive — part relief that you were not wrong, part shame that your voice did not stop the event. I keep returning to that old habit of mine — pointing to what could happen, proposing concrete protections, and asking that those protections be treated as moral and institutional imperatives rather than political conveniences.

There is value in being proved right by events only if we translate that proof into policy and practice. Otherwise, prediction is vanity.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh