Date:03/10/2010 URL: 
http://www.thehindu.com/2010/10/03/stories/2010100352070800.htm


Data usage in India is set to increase 

Special Correspondent 
It is likely to grow twice as fast as in the rest of the world 

CHENNAI: Running out of space on your hard disk to store all your digital 
photos? Brace yourself for this prediction: in the coming decade, the data usage
pattern in India is likely to grow at a rate twice as much as the rest of the 
world.

The digital information in India will grow from 40,000 petabytes to 2.3 million 
petabytes, says a study on 'Digital Universe in India,' sponsored by information
infrastructure solution company EMC Corporation and conducted by the IDC Group.

The country's share of digital information is expected to grow 60-fold by 2020, 
driven by the rollout of 3G/BWA networks, digitisation of television networks
and increased technology adoption among individuals, small and medium 
businesses and enterprises, and in government services such as the Unique ID 
project
and census.

"India will consume twice as much data as the rest of the world," says Manoj 
Chugh, president, EMC India and SAARC, and Director of the Global Accounts
for EMC Asia Pacific & Japan. "That is the most interesting finding."

As of 2010, the study finds that the digital data in the country can be stored 
in 2.5 billion iPads (of 16 GB). The data, if stacked in those iPads one
above the other, could form 4,64,000 separate towers of the size of Qutub 
Minar. Laid end to end, it will form a 600 million meters of iPads, roughly 10
times the running length of the Indian railway network.

While the study itself was commissioned to understand the infrastructure 
demands of the chief information officers of various small and medium IT 
enterprises,
the data deluge very much includes even the consumers. "Individual consumers 
are in fact a lot faster in adapting themselves to the changes than even the
big corporation. You already see a lot more individuals store their data on 
cloud computing networks," Mr. Chugh points out.

Interestingly, already there is 50 per cent digital content surplus being 
created in the country that does not have storage space.
E RENUKA,
SECTION OFFICER,
ICT CENTRE FOR VISUALLY CHALLENGED,
CHMK LIBRARY,
UNIVERSITY OF CALICUT
CALICUT, UNIVERSITY P O,
MALAPPURAM DISTRICT,
KERALA.
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