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

Translate

Thursday, 19 March 2026

VotesApp : Designed By Claude

 I asked Claude :


hey bro : here is my proposal for a mobile app for remote voting. Please give a comprehensive system architecture ( along with U / I and softwares ) for this > http://www.hemenparekh.in/2013/08/votesapp.html  ... 18 Dec 2012


Claude replied :


Great proposal from Hemenparekh! The VotesApp idea is ahead of its time — Aadhaar-linked mobile voting with selfie verification. Let me build you a comprehensive system architecture for this.

V

visualize show_widget

Now let's look at the two critical user flows — registration and voting:

V

visualize show_widget

Now the mobile UI mockups — the actual screens a voter sees:

V

visualize show_widget

Here's the full comprehensive breakdown:


VotesApp — Complete System Architecture

Software Stack

Mobile (Android / iOS)

  • React Native or Flutter (single codebase for both platforms)
  • Available on: Google Play, App Store, GetJar, EC official site
  • Pre-loaded on government devices (Aakash tablets, future schemes)

Backend Microservices

  • Language: Go (for high concurrency — critical on election day spikes) + Python for AI/ML workloads
  • Framework: gRPC internally, REST + GraphQL for clients
  • Container orchestration: Kubernetes on NIC's MeghRaj sovereign cloud

Databases

  • Voter registry: PostgreSQL with HA replication (never loses a row)
  • Vote ledger: Permissioned blockchain (Hyperledger Fabric) — append-only, immutable, auditable
  • Sessions / OTP: Redis Cluster
  • Selfie hashes: Object store (S3-compatible) — faces never stored raw, only cryptographic hashes

Security

  • End-to-end encryption: Ballots encrypted with ElGamal / homomorphic encryption so votes can be tallied without decrypting individual votes
  • Zero-knowledge proofs: Voter can verify their vote was counted without revealing who they voted for
  • Hardware Security Modules (HSM): All keys managed in HSM — tally keys split among EC officials (multi-party threshold)
  • TLS 1.3 on all transport

AI / Face Match

  • Selfie liveness detection (prevents photos of photos)
  • Face matching against Aadhaar ABIS (Automated Biometric Identification System) via UIDAI API
  • On-device preprocessing → cloud match (selfie never stored post-match)

Key Design Decisions aligned with Hemenparekh's proposal

Proposal FeatureImplementation
Aadhaar-linked registrationUIDAI API with demographic + biometric verification
Mobile number bindingTelecom API + OTP; vote only castable from registered SIM
Underage preventionDate of birth verified via Aadhaar — server-enforced, not just UI
Selfie match (2015 addition)Liveness check + ABIS face match at both registration AND vote time
One vote onlyVote ledger checks voter ID before accepting — app hard-locked after
Physical booth exclusionEC voter rolls updated in real-time; polling officer app cross-checks
Long-press candidate detailsCandidate assets/criminal record pulled from EC affidavit API
NOTA optionFully supported in ballot UI
Booth capture impossibleNo physical location — attack surface is cryptographic, not physical

Scale Planning (election day)

900M+ eligible voters; peak concurrency could hit 50M+ votes/hour. The architecture handles this via: horizontal pod autoscaling on Kubernetes, Redis caching for candidate lists, async vote processing via message queues (Kafka), and CDN edge nodes for static assets. Vote casting itself is sub-100ms — the blockchain write happens asynchronously after the voter gets their confirmation.

Click any node in the architecture diagram above to explore a specific component!

Hidden Hub Revealed

Hidden Hub Revealed

Introduction

I’ve spent years watching small, quiet interventions ripple into big changes. In my work and writing I keep returning to one idea: many rural transformations start not with grand projects but with a modest, well-placed hub — a physical and digital meeting point that stitches services, knowledge and markets together. In this post I call that node the “hidden hub” and explain why it is quietly reshaping rural livelihoods.

What is the hidden hub?

A hidden hub is a locally rooted, multipurpose centre — sometimes physical, often "phygital" (physically present and digitally enabled) — where people access information, training, market links, financial services and social support in one place. Think of it as a one-stop neighbourhood platform that combines know-how, connections and basic infrastructure.

This model is not hypothetical. Researchers and practitioners label similar entities as Rural Development Hubs or Digital/Village Hubs (Aspen Institute report; FAO’s Digital Villages work) and show how compact, flexible hubs can catalyse systems-level change rather than short-term fixes.

How it operates

Hidden hubs work through a few simple, repeatable mechanics:

  • Convening: they bring diverse stakeholders together — farmers, youth, local administrators, service providers — in an accessible space.
  • Aggregation of services: extension advice, skilling, e-governance, fintech and market information co-exist under one roof or platform.
  • Intermediation: hub staff or local entrepreneurs act as interpreters of technology and policy for villagers, lowering adoption barriers.
  • Market linkages: hubs aggregate supply and negotiate better terms with buyers, logistics providers or input suppliers.
  • Learning loops: data and feedback from the hub inform continuous improvement and local decision-making.

Practical examples include digitally-enabled Youth Hubs that connect rural youth to jobs and entrepreneurship pathways (GOYN case study) and digital village initiatives that provide telehealth, e-extension and market platforms (FAO’s Digital Villages). My earlier commentary about digital Common Service Centers also highlighted this principle — bundling services improves reach and value for rural users (my post on Common Service Centers going Digital).

Impacts on livelihoods

When a hub functions well, its effects stack up quickly:

  • Increased incomes: better market information and collective marketing improve prices; targeted training increases yields or value-addition.
  • Diversification: access to new skills and microfinance reduces dependence on seasonal agriculture and creates off-farm jobs.
  • Inclusion: hubs can be deliberately designed to reach women, youth and marginalized groups through safe spaces and tailored programming.
  • Resilience: hubs aggregate risk management tools (weather advisories, crop insurance links, savings groups) that stabilize incomes.

Evidence from multiple initiatives shows impressive outcomes: Youth Hubs in rural India recorded thousands of youth placed in jobs or supported to start businesses; digital agriculture pilots have improved adoption rates and productivity when combined with community-driven demonstration and training (see World Bank and Digital Green work on decentralized digital libraries and video-based extension).

Challenges and practical solutions

Hidden hubs are powerful but not magic. Common challenges include:

  • Financial sustainability: donor funding can seed hubs, but sustainability requires diversified revenue (service fees, anchor tenants like schools, local government contracts).
  • Trust and governance: hubs must be accountable to the community; co-design and local governance boards help.
  • Digital access and skills: connectivity and device access remain uneven. A phased model — human intermediaries plus low-bandwidth services (SMS/voice) — widens reach.
  • Fragmentation of services: without coordination, multiple single-purpose efforts can compete. Hubs succeed when they focus on local priorities and knit partners together.

Practical fixes I’ve seen work:

  • Start small and modular: pilot a few services, prove impact, then scale.
  • Invest in local intermediary roles (hub managers, digital entrepreneurs) who bridge technology and people.
  • Structure public–private partnerships so the public sector anchors core services while private actors add market-driven value.
  • Measure outcomes that matter locally (income stability, number of households accessing services), not just outputs.

Future outlook

Over the next decade hidden hubs can shift from pilots to the backbone of rural service delivery. Advances in low-cost connectivity, richer open-data platforms and affordable local entrepreneurship models make hubs more viable at scale. But scale must remain context-sensitive: hubs will look different across regions — some primarily digital platforms, others cooperative-managed physical centres.

Policy choices will matter. When governments recognize hubs as legitimate delivery partners and align procurement, training and social programs, the pace of change accelerates (the Aspen and FAO literature point to the catalytic role of enabling policy). My own early writings on bridging digital divides and Common Service Centers pointed to this same policy imperative: technology must be anchored in local institutions to deliver durable change.

Conclusion

Hidden hubs are not glamorous. They’re simple, often invisible architectures of connection — a chair, a computer, a facilitator and a network. Yet they are where ideas meet markets, knowledge meets practice, and resilience is built. If we want rural livelihoods to move beyond survival toward dignity and choice, the hub model deserves more attention, more patient funding and more trust in local leadership.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh


Any questions / doubts / clarifications regarding this blog? Just ask (by typing or talking) my Virtual Avatar on the website embedded below. Then "Share" that to your friend on WhatsApp.

Get correct answer to any question asked by Shri Amitabh Bachchan on Kaun Banega Crorepati, faster than any contestant


Hello Candidates :

  • For UPSC – IAS – IPS – IFS etc., exams, you must prepare to answer, essay type questions which test your General Knowledge / Sensitivity of current events
  • If you have read this blog carefully , you should be able to answer the following question:
"What are the essential services a rural development hub must provide to effectively improve livelihoods?"
  • Need help ? No problem . Following are two AI AGENTS where we have PRE-LOADED this question in their respective Question Boxes . All that you have to do is just click SUBMIT
    1. www.HemenParekh.ai { a SLM , powered by my own Digital Content of more than 50,000 + documents, written by me over past 60 years of my professional career }
    2. www.IndiaAGI.ai { a consortium of 3 LLMs which debate and deliver a CONSENSUS answer – and each gives its own answer as well ! }
  • It is up to you to decide which answer is more comprehensive / nuanced ( For sheer amazement, click both SUBMIT buttons quickly, one after another ) Then share any answer with yourself / your friends ( using WhatsApp / Email ). Nothing stops you from submitting ( just copy / paste from your resource ), all those questions from last year’s UPSC exam paper as well !
  • May be there are other online resources which too provide you answers to UPSC “ General Knowledge “ questions but only I provide you in 26 languages !




Interested in having your LinkedIn profile featured here?

Submit a request.
Executives You May Want to Follow or Connect
Shikhar Saran Srivastava
Shikhar Saran Srivastava
Vice President, Executive Board @ CITLoB
Vice President, Executive Board @ CITLoB | Senior Software Engineering Manager @ Cisco | AI-Driven Continuous Localization Platforms | AWS Certified AI ...
Loading views...
shikhsri@cisco.com
Kiran Mazumdar Shaw
Kiran Mazumdar Shaw
Chairperson, Biocon Group
Top 100 Biotech Visionaries: 'Worldview 100' ... Providing leadership and work towards advancing the position of the Indian Biotech and Biopharma Industry.
Loading views...
kiran@biocon.com
Bhavna Pandya
Bhavna Pandya
G100: Mission Million
Experience: G100: Mission Million · Education: Indian Institute of Management ... As a Chief Incubation Officer at riidl Somaiya Vidyavihar with over 10 years of…
Loading views...
Nishant .
Nishant .
Vice President
Vice President - Nykaa Fashion | SUGAR | Myntra | Booz & Co | Ecommerce | P&L Lead · Business Leader with 15 years' work experience across e-commerce and ...
Loading views...
Vikas Bhatia
Vikas Bhatia
Vice President (Apparel) | Ex Shoppers Stop
Vice President (Apparel) | Ex Shoppers Stop| Ex Aditya Birla | Ex ITC | Apparel | Retail | Fashion | E Commerce | Buying | Merchandising | Sourcing · A ...
Loading views...

From Advice to Action

From Advice to Action

From intelligence that advises to one that acts: the rise of physical AI

I’ve been watching — and writing about — the arc of AI for years: from systems that answered questions and nudged decisions to machines that now put hands, wheels, and actuators into the messy world. This transition from virtual counsel to physical action is not a single invention but the intersection of long-running advances in robotics, perception, control, machine learning, and edge compute. In this post I want to place that trajectory in context, give concrete examples, and offer practical takeaways for technologists and policymakers.

A very short history: advice → embodiment

The first wave of applied AI gave us recommendation engines, chatbots, and decision-support tools. They sat inside servers and APIs — advising, not doing. The second wave grafted intelligence onto hardware. We moved from a model that says “you should” to systems that say “I will.” Commercial milestones illustrate the shift:

  • Mobile manipulation and mobile robots in warehouses (the Kiva story and Amazon Robotics deployments) scaled logistics automation and changed operational design for fulfillment centers Amazon Robotics overview.
  • Surgical robots like Intuitive’s da Vinci have extended human capability in operating rooms, enabling more precise minimally invasive procedures while retaining the surgeon-in-the-loop model Intuitive Surgical da Vinci.
  • Autonomous vehicles moved from lab demos to robotaxis on public roads; companies publish safety-impact metrics from millions of autonomous miles to demonstrate real-world performance gains (see Waymo’s safety hub) Waymo Safety Impact.
  • Boston Dynamics’ shift from viral research demos to commercial platforms (Spot, Stretch, Atlas) shows how dynamic mobility, manipulation, and fleet software are converging into field-ready robotic services Boston Dynamics Atlas and Spot examples.

Those developments make the point plainly: physical AI isn’t one product — it’s a systems problem solved across hardware, software, data, and operation.

Core technologies that made it real

  • Robotics hardware: actuators, lightweight high-torque motors, compliant grippers, batteries and modular chassis that permit continuous operation outside the lab.
  • Perception: multi-modal sensing (cameras, lidar, radar, depth, tactile sensors) combined with computer vision and sensor fusion to build situational awareness.
  • Control and planning: classical control, model predictive control, and learned policies (RL, imitation learning) for locomotion, grasping, and manipulation.
  • Machine learning: perception networks, policy learning, sim-to-real transfer techniques, and foundation models adapted for embodied tasks.
  • Edge and distributed compute: on-device and nearby edge inference to meet low-latency constraints and preserve privacy while cloud and fleet-level computation handle heavy training and analytics.

These technologies are not independent. The magic is their orchestration: robust perception feeding real-time control, supervised by fleet orchestration at the edge and cloud.

Where physical AI is already reshaping the world

  • Manufacturing and warehouses: automated picking, mobile racks, AMRs and robotic arms that raise throughput while reducing repetitive strain. Amazon’s deployments illustrate scale and integration with cloud/edge systems Amazon Robotics history.
  • Healthcare: robotic-assisted surgery and AI-guided diagnostics expand clinical capabilities while requiring careful human oversight (da Vinci systems are a leading example) Intuitive Surgical.
  • Logistics and last-mile: autonomous forklifts, sorting arms, and delivery robots streamline flows and reduce turnaround times.
  • Home and service robots: vacuum robots are mainstream; more sophisticated home assistants and telepresence platforms are arriving slowly as perception and safety improve.
  • Autonomous vehicles: robotaxis and delivery AVs are demonstrating safety and operational metrics at scale; public trials and deployments are already changing mobility patterns Waymo safety hub.

Ethical, safety and regulatory considerations

Physical AI changes the risk model: mistakes hurt people and property. Key considerations include:

  • Alignment and intent: ensuring machines pursue goals that match human values and operational constraints.
  • Robustness and verification: validating systems across edge cases and environments, using simulation and large-scale testing.
  • Human oversight and fail-safe design: preserving meaningful human control and graceful degradation modes.
  • Legal frameworks and liability: who is responsible when a robot acts autonomously — manufacturer, operator, or software provider? Regulators are scrambling to clarify liability, reporting, and certification processes.
  • Transparency and auditability: logging decisions, sensor data, and model versions to enable post-incident analysis.

Policy must go beyond checklist regulation and enable standardized safety testing, data transparency for public analysis, and conditional deployment regimes (pilot → monitored scale → full operations).

Economic and social impacts

Physical AI will raise productivity but also create distributional challenges.

  • Jobs: automation will displace some repetitive roles while creating demand for technicians, robot operators, simulation engineers, and data specialists.
  • Productivity and costs: robots reduce cycle times and safety risks; incumbents that adopt them can unlock large efficiency gains.
  • Inequality: regions and firms with access to capital and talent will capture disproportionate gains unless policy intervenes with retraining and transition programs.

My practical view: plan for transitions. Invest in reskilling, incentivize human-in-the-loop roles, and design complementary policies (portable benefits, apprenticeship pathways) so automation enhances broad-based prosperity.

Technical challenges and research directions

  • Generalization: policies that work across diverse, unstructured environments remain an unsolved challenge.
  • Sim-to-real bridging: domain randomization, latent space methods, and better simulators reduce real-world retraining costs; progress here scales deployments faster sim-to-real surveys and examples.
  • Sample efficiency: learning with far fewer real-world trials using offline RL, model-based methods, and better transfer learning.
  • Multi-agent coordination: fleets of robots need scalable communication, decentralized planning, and conflict resolution under uncertainty.
  • Safety-oriented learning: integrating formal verification, safe RL, and runtime assurance so learned policies are certifiable for critical domains.

Each challenge is an opportunity for interdisciplinary teams combining controls, ML, HCI, and domain engineering.

Metaphor: intelligence as a nervous system

Think of cloud AI as a brain, edge compute as the spinal cord, and the robot hardware as the muscles and senses. You need all three layers well-integrated to move reliably through the world. Weakness in any layer — brittle perception, slow nerves, or fragile muscles — breaks the system.

Actionable takeaways

For policymakers:

  • Fund public testbeds and transparent benchmarking for safety-critical deployments.
  • Create conditional permits for pilots that require public reporting of incidents and data for independent analysis.
  • Invest in worker transition programs tied to emerging industry needs (robot maintenance, data operations, simulation engineering).

For technologists and leaders:

  • Design for graceful failure and human override from day one.
  • Prioritize sim-to-real pipelines and edge-enabled inference to accelerate adoption.
  • Build cross-functional teams (controls + ML + systems + ops) and instrument deployments with rich logging and observability.

Looking ahead

Physical AI will not replace human judgment; it will reshape how we design work, cities, and care. The systems that thrive will be those that combine robust engineering, ethical guardrails, and clear operational practices. I have written about adjacent issues — the governance of conversational agents and principles for responsible systems in prior posts — and the lessons still apply: build with transparency, require human feedback loops, and design controls before capability. See my reflections on chatbot safeguards and the need for human-in-the-loop guardrails for continuity with these ideas earlier thoughts on chatbot safety and personal AIs.

I’m excited and cautious. The move from advising to acting is the most consequential chapter in AI’s history so far — it demands engineering rigor, regulatory imagination, and societal will.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh


Any questions / doubts / clarifications regarding this blog? Just ask (by typing or talking) my Virtual Avatar on the website embedded below. Then "Share" that to your friend on WhatsApp.

Get correct answer to any question asked by Shri Amitabh Bachchan on Kaun Banega Crorepati, faster than any contestant


Hello Candidates :

  • For UPSC – IAS – IPS – IFS etc., exams, you must prepare to answer, essay type questions which test your General Knowledge / Sensitivity of current events
  • If you have read this blog carefully , you should be able to answer the following question:
"What are the main technical obstacles that prevent sim-to-real trained robot policies from generalizing reliably to new real-world environments?"
  • Need help ? No problem . Following are two AI AGENTS where we have PRE-LOADED this question in their respective Question Boxes . All that you have to do is just click SUBMIT
    1. www.HemenParekh.ai { a SLM , powered by my own Digital Content of more than 50,000 + documents, written by me over past 60 years of my professional career }
    2. www.IndiaAGI.ai { a consortium of 3 LLMs which debate and deliver a CONSENSUS answer – and each gives its own answer as well ! }
  • It is up to you to decide which answer is more comprehensive / nuanced ( For sheer amazement, click both SUBMIT buttons quickly, one after another ) Then share any answer with yourself / your friends ( using WhatsApp / Email ). Nothing stops you from submitting ( just copy / paste from your resource ), all those questions from last year’s UPSC exam paper as well !
  • May be there are other online resources which too provide you answers to UPSC “ General Knowledge “ questions but only I provide you in 26 languages !




Interested in having your LinkedIn profile featured here?

Submit a request.
Executives You May Want to Follow or Connect
Anita Raaj
Anita Raaj
Entrepreneur & CEO at Techsharthi | AI & ML Innovator
... Business with Cutting edge AI Solutions|Tech Visionary & Industry Disruptor | · With ... Techsharthi is a dynamic consulting firm specializing in cloud, AI, and ...
Loading views...
Dhruv Pandit (Youngest Cyber Security Entrepreneur of India)
Dhruv Pandit (Youngest Cyber Security Entrepreneur of India)
undefined
Co-Founder, CEO & Director @ Drona Cyber Solutions ... Btech in Computer Science with specialization in cloud based application offered by IBM Cloud Computing and ...
Loading views...
dhruv@dronacybersolutions.com
Saumya Chaturvedi
Saumya Chaturvedi
Tata Consumer Products
Consumer Products has evolved from Director of Strategy to my current role as VP of Digital Transformation, focusing on sales and marketing. My competencies ...
Loading views...
saumya.chaturvedi1@tataconsumer.com
Murali Tirumareddi
Murali Tirumareddi
Lead – Talent Acquisition
Currently serving as Lead – Talent Acquisition at Aizant Drug Research Solutions Pvt Ltd, I spearhead hiring strategies across diverse verticals including R&D, ...
Loading views...
murali.tirumareddi@aizant.com
Aparna Vishwasrao
Aparna Vishwasrao
CHRO / FMCG Pharma BFSI Energy ...
... Talent acquisition, Change management, Compensation ... • Launched the Talent Development and Organizational Development vertical as a greenfield venture.
Loading views...

Wednesday, 18 March 2026

Homegrown AI Goes Global

Homegrown AI Goes Global

Introduction

I watched the news about a Mumbai teenager who launched a homegrown AI platform reach an unexpected pitch of scale — available in 175 countries and listed on the Apple App Store. As someone who spends a lot of time thinking about India’s technology trajectory, I felt a mixture of celebration and careful curiosity. This is a story worth unpacking: it’s about young talent, the democratisation of AI, and what it means when local ideas find global audiences.

Context: India’s AI moment

India is not just experimenting with AI anymore; it is staging a deliberate push to shape how the technology is built and used. The country recently hosted a major international AI summit and released commitments to expand compute, model development, and multi‑lingual capabilities aimed at inclusive impact India–AI Impact Summit 2026 and related government briefings PIB coverage. Those national efforts matter because they create infrastructure, policy attention, and an ecosystem that lets grassroots innovators — including school-aged founders — scale quickly.

What the report says (the facts)

  • The founder is an 18‑year‑old commerce student from Navi Mumbai (specific school not stated in public reporting consulted). The teenager assembled a consumer-facing AI platform that went live on the Apple App Store and is reported to be available in 175 countries Times of India.
  • The product positions itself as a human‑centred AI platform rather than a conventional utility chatbot: emphasising emotionally aware, context‑sensitive conversation, realistic voice interaction and image generation.
  • The founder’s earlier work included an economics‑facing platform to educate farmers about minimum support price (MSP) and market transparency; that project informed the move into AI application design.

Why availability in 175 countries matters

Distribution at that scale is not merely a vanity metric. It signals that the product met Apple’s app review requirements and was packaged for international use — localization, compliance, and basic trust signals. Being on a major storefront also amplifies discoverability for users and potential partners across time zones, languages and regulatory regimes. For a homegrown idea to cross borders quickly, it must combine product polish with an understanding of diverse user contexts.

The significance of an Apple Store feature

An App Store listing means a developer has passed a set of technical, privacy and content checks; being noticed on Apple’s platform confers credibility that helps with user trials, journalist attention, and investor conversations. It is not a guarantee of product‑market fit, but it is a crucial early milestone in any mobile‑first product’s lifecycle.

Features and approach (product highlights)

  • Human‑centred conversation flow: the app is reported to prioritise natural language that feels emotionally aware and Gen‑Z native in tone.
  • Voice interaction: realistic audio dialogues rather than text‑only exchange.
  • Image generation: integrated visual creativity features to support composition and ideation.
  • Designed for accessibility: the aim appears to be low friction across cultures and age groups, reducing the need for technical fluency.

Challenges the founder faced

From the reporting I reviewed, several constraints stand out — and they mirror obstacles many young founders face:

  • Self‑taught engineering: no formal computer‑science degree was reported; much of the development was learned online and implemented personally.
  • Resource limits: building AI features (voice, image generation, realistic dialogue) without deep organisational backing requires careful architecture choices and likely reliance on third‑party models or APIs.
  • Regulatory and platform review: navigating Apple’s review process, privacy requirements and content policies is time consuming for first‑time app teams.

Paraphrasing the founder’s approach (as reported)

He described a step‑by‑step self‑learning process: using one side of the screen to learn and the other to implement; he moved from an economics project for farmers to a consumer AI app with human‑centred interaction as the guiding philosophy Times of India.

Implications for the Indian startup ecosystem

This story matters for several reasons:

  • Talent pipeline: It is a reminder that ingenuity is not confined to elite CS programs. Young founders with domain insight (here, economics + social context) can produce differentiated, globally relevant products.
  • Product orientation: Human‑centred AI that begins with empathy and context can compete with purely utility or command‑driven tools, especially in diverse markets.
  • Ecosystem signals: Platform validation (App Store listing), coupled with national compute and policy investments, creates a feedback loop where ambitious builders believe they can reach global users from India.

Next steps for the platform (sensible priorities)

  • Strengthen governance and safety: scale responsibly with clear privacy, data‑use and moderation policies.
  • Localisation and languages: add multi‑lingual support and cultural tuning to improve relevance in non‑English markets.
  • Partnerships: tie up with education, health or creative platforms where human‑centred AI can offer measurable outcomes.
  • Research and evaluation: collect rigorous user feedback and outcome metrics to iterate beyond novelty to real utility.

My perspective and a small reminder

I’ve written before about the need for India to build human‑centred models and for innovators to combine domain expertise with product focus see my earlier reflections on collaborative AI and IndiaAGI. This Mumbai‑based milestone is precisely the kind of emergent evidence that local approaches, when built well, can scale and inform larger national ambitions.

Conclusion and call to action

This is a welcome story — youthful ambition meeting global distribution. But applause must be matched by support: mentorship, platform credits, ethical guidance and access to compute. If you care about homegrown innovation, consider these actions:

  • Try the product (if you can) and share constructive feedback.
  • Mentor or open a channel for product or legal advice to early teams.
  • Amplify credible homegrown products so they get the testing and traction they deserve.

Suggested tags

AI #Startups #MadeInIndia


Regards,
Hemen Parekh


Any questions / doubts / clarifications regarding this blog? Just ask (by typing or talking) my Virtual Avatar on the website embedded below. Then "Share" that to your friend on WhatsApp.

Get correct answer to any question asked by Shri Amitabh Bachchan on Kaun Banega Crorepati, faster than any contestant


Hello Candidates :

  • For UPSC – IAS – IPS – IFS etc., exams, you must prepare to answer, essay type questions which test your General Knowledge / Sensitivity of current events
  • If you have read this blog carefully , you should be able to answer the following question:
"How can human‑centred AI platforms from India balance emotional intelligence and cultural sensitivity while meeting global privacy and safety standards?"
  • Need help ? No problem . Following are two AI AGENTS where we have PRE-LOADED this question in their respective Question Boxes . All that you have to do is just click SUBMIT
    1. www.HemenParekh.ai { a SLM , powered by my own Digital Content of more than 50,000 + documents, written by me over past 60 years of my professional career }
    2. www.IndiaAGI.ai { a consortium of 3 LLMs which debate and deliver a CONSENSUS answer – and each gives its own answer as well ! }
  • It is up to you to decide which answer is more comprehensive / nuanced ( For sheer amazement, click both SUBMIT buttons quickly, one after another ) Then share any answer with yourself / your friends ( using WhatsApp / Email ). Nothing stops you from submitting ( just copy / paste from your resource ), all those questions from last year’s UPSC exam paper as well !
  • May be there are other online resources which too provide you answers to UPSC “ General Knowledge “ questions but only I provide you in 26 languages !




Interested in having your LinkedIn profile featured here?

Submit a request.
Executives You May Want to Follow or Connect
Ashok Agarwal
Ashok Agarwal
CEO & Business Leader | Electronics Manufacturing
Welcome to ILJIN Electronics, a leading provider of Electronics Manufacturing Services and a proud member of the Amber Group. With a rich history of innovation ...
Loading views...
ashok@iljin.co.in
Durga Prasad Akhnoor
Durga Prasad Akhnoor
CEO @ TATA HENDRICKSON
GLOBAL BUSINESS LEADER | CEO @ TATA HENDRICKSON | DRIVING INNOVATION & GROWTH IN BUS, TRUCK TIPPER,AND ELECTRIC VEHICLE SEGMENT | STRATEGIC VISIONARY | P&L ...
Loading views...
durga.akhnoor@forseepower.com
ANMOL DANG
ANMOL DANG
Vice President of Sales
Dynamic Leader in Healthcare & Sales | Business Growth & Strategy Expert. With over 11 years of experience in healthcare, sales, and business development, ...
Loading views...
anmol.dang@pharmeasy.in
Venkataraman D
Venkataraman D
Vice President
... Technology ,software solutions & services, sales management, Channel strategy and program management. · Experience: Crayon · Location: Bengaluru · 500+ ...
Loading views...
venkataraman.d@crayon.com
Anu Raj
Anu Raj
CMO by title I Brand whisperer and storyteller ...
... financial services & consumer businesses, I've built brands that are trusted, launched products that stick, and delivered growth by blending sharp strategy ...
Loading views...

Temporary Hawking Zones Now

Temporary Hawking Zones Now

Temporary Hawking Zones Now

I read the Assembly's recent direction to the civic body with a mixture of relief and impatience. Relief, because for thousands of people the issue is not an abstract policy question but a day-to-day struggle for survival. Impatience, because this is a pause — a temporary stopgap — not the durable justice that street vendors have been waiting for since the Street Vendors Act was passed.

The state reply said the 2014 survey had identified 32,415 eligible hawkers and that the government will ask the Brihanmumbai Municipal Corporation to allot temporary pitches to those eligible vendors until the Town Vending Committee process is finalised and the courts resolve outstanding disputes. The announcement was made in the Assembly by the Industries Minister Uday Samant (udaysamant@midcindia.org) in response to a calling-attention motion and a direction from the Assembly Speaker.[1][2]

My immediate thought: temporary pitches are better than forced removals without alternatives. But they will succeed only if they are transparent, mapped, and supported by law and local administration.

Why this matters to me

I have written about hawkers and public space before — arguing that the conversation must move from eviction vs. tolerance to designing inclusive urban systems where livelihoods and pedestrian rights coexist. I suggested practical responses such as pop-up markets, mobile vending, and technology-enabled registration long before this most recent direction.[3]

This moment matters because:

  • These are not merely regulatory details; for tens of thousands they are the difference between earning and not earning tomorrow.
  • A temporary allotment without a transparent plan risks becoming another layer of informality and political patronage.
  • The legal delays and court cases that have stalled permanent allocations cannot be an excuse to indefinitely deny people space to work.

What should “temporary” look like? A checklist

Temporary must not mean chaotic. If we want humane, effective temporary hawking pitches, the BMC and state should deliver all of the following quickly:

  • Clear, published maps of temporary zones with GPS coordinates and permitted timings.
  • A simple digital registry that ties each temporary pitch to a verified applicant from the 2014 exercise.
  • Fixed rules on what can be sold where (food-vs-nonfood) and basic hygiene standards for food vendors.
  • A time-bound schedule to move from temporary allotment to a legally constituted Town Vending Committee (TVC) process.
  • A grievance and appeals portal so vendors and residents can flag genuine problems without reverting to street-level conflict.
  • An independent monitoring mechanism (NGOs, urban planners, and vendor representatives) to ensure allocations aren’t captured by middlemen.

Balance, not zero-sum

The legitimate complaints of pedestrians, businesses, and resident groups cannot be ignored. Footpaths and access must be protected. But that protection cannot be the simple removal of livelihoods with no alternative. I believe we can design solutions that win both ways:

  • Time-share pitches (morning vs. evening) in some high-footfall stretches.
  • Portable, hygienic kiosks in designated lanes that keep sidewalks usable.
  • A complaints-first enforcement model (fix the issue, then regulate), rather than punitive demolition without notice.

Technology and dignity

Technology is not a silver bullet, but it can reduce corruption and increase transparency. A simple app that shows the map of temporary pitches, a QR code identifying each licensed vendor, and a small digital payment/receipt facility for statutory fees will reduce friction and build trust.

I’ve argued previously that the State should use data, surveys, and simple digital tools to monitor and support hawkers rather than merely penalise them.[3] This temporary allotment is an opportunity to pilot those tools at scale.

Legal knots cannot strangle lives indefinitely

Courts are vital, and legal clarity is necessary — but meanwhile people need to survive. A temporary, time-bound directive that is implemented with transparency can be a humane bridge until permanent structures are in place.

If the BMC follows through in good faith, publishes maps, and sets a clear timeline to transition temporary pitches into TVC-approved, permanent allocations, this could be a turning point for thousands of families.

If not, temporary will mean another round of evictions, court challenges, and trust broken.

My ask — simple, actionable

  1. Publish the list of eligible vendors (from the 2014 exercise) and match them to temporary pitches within 15 days.
  2. Launch a public-facing dashboard showing maps, vendor lists, and a 90-day transition plan to a TVC process.
  3. Appoint a small oversight panel including vendor representatives, an urban planner, and a civil-society member to audit allocations.

These steps would honour the spirit of the law while protecting those who must work every day to feed their families.


References

  • “Maharashtra Assembly Directs BMC To Allot Temporary Hawking Zones For Mumbai Vendors,” Free Press Journal.[1]
  • Follow-up reporting and context on the interim measures: Times of India.[2]
  • My earlier reflections on hawkers, pop-up markets and rights to livelihood: Hawkers RTL (Right to Living).[3]

Regards,
Hemen Parekh


Any questions / doubts / clarifications regarding this blog? Just ask (by typing or talking) my Virtual Avatar on the website embedded below. Then "Share" that to your friend on WhatsApp.

Get correct answer to any question asked by Shri Amitabh Bachchan on Kaun Banega Crorepati, faster than any contestant


Hello Candidates :

  • For UPSC – IAS – IPS – IFS etc., exams, you must prepare to answer, essay type questions which test your General Knowledge / Sensitivity of current events
  • If you have read this blog carefully , you should be able to answer the following question:
"What is a Town Vending Committee (TVC) and why is it central to implementing the Street Vendors (Protection of Livelihood and Regulation of Street Vending) Act, 2014?"
  • Need help ? No problem . Following are two AI AGENTS where we have PRE-LOADED this question in their respective Question Boxes . All that you have to do is just click SUBMIT
    1. www.HemenParekh.ai { a SLM , powered by my own Digital Content of more than 50,000 + documents, written by me over past 60 years of my professional career }
    2. www.IndiaAGI.ai { a consortium of 3 LLMs which debate and deliver a CONSENSUS answer – and each gives its own answer as well ! }
  • It is up to you to decide which answer is more comprehensive / nuanced ( For sheer amazement, click both SUBMIT buttons quickly, one after another ) Then share any answer with yourself / your friends ( using WhatsApp / Email ). Nothing stops you from submitting ( just copy / paste from your resource ), all those questions from last year’s UPSC exam paper as well !
  • May be there are other online resources which too provide you answers to UPSC “ General Knowledge “ questions but only I provide you in 26 languages !




Interested in having your LinkedIn profile featured here?

Submit a request.
Executives You May Want to Follow or Connect
Tushar Shroff
Tushar Shroff
Chief Financial Officer, Zydus Lifesciences | LinkedIn
... pharmaceutical companies in managing the corporate functions. Presently, working as Senior Vice President - Corporate Finance with Zydus Cadila responsible ...
Loading views...
Vera Shevchenko
Vera Shevchenko
Vice President, Supply Chain
Vice President, Supply Chain | Automotive Manufacturing | Driving Supplier Performance, Logistics Optimization & Global Operations · Mr Vishvas Kailash ...
Loading views...
Milind Gupta
Milind Gupta
Vice President Supply Chain & Logistics
... optimizing global supply chain operations. My expertise lies in developing and implementing digital transformation projects, strategic sourcing plans, logistics ...
Loading views...
milind.gupta@satyaretail.com
Tushar P.
Tushar P.
Accomplished CTO/CIO | Cloud Architecture | Big Data & AI
... development, delivering strategic IT solutions that align with business goals ... As Senior Systems Architect, I architected next-generation fintech solutions ...
Loading views...
tushar.p@gllfl.com
Yogesh Gupta
Yogesh Gupta
Chief Technology Officer @ Bijlipay | Payment Domain
... fintech sector, I currently serve as Chief Technology Officer at Bijlipay, where I oversee the development and delivery of cutting-edge payment solutions.
Loading views...
yogeshgupta@bijlipay.co.in