Hi Thats, we are in the process of trying to place is with a US distributor,
otherwise would be difficult for us to send out -- will let you know about
that,
how are things?

yrs
Carol

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Thaths" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Wednesday, April 05, 2006 9:09 PM
Subject: Re: [silk] Coding Culture film series on Indian IT workers
nowavailable


Hi Carol,

Any way of getting a copy of this to the US?

Thanks.

S.
PS: I returned to the Bay Area last year and started working for
Google last month.

On 4/5/06, Carol Upadhya <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
> _____________
>
> CODING CULTURE
>      A series of three films on
> Bangalore's Software Industry
>
>          July Boys   30 min
>         The 'M' Way  30 min
>          Fun @ Sun  32 min
> _______________
>
>
> The Indian software industry has emerged as a key node of the global
> capitalist economy, and Indian software engineers are now a significant
> category of global 'knowledge workers'.  This series of films takes a
close
> look at the software industry in Bangalore and its work culture.  Produced
> as part of the NIAS-IDPAD project on Indian IT workers, the films are
> packaged with a booklet outlining the sociological significance of their
> themes.  For more information, click on:
> http://www.iisc.ernet.in/nias/codingculture.htm
>
> Price for all three films, with the booklet:
>
>      Individuals - Rs 250/-
>      Institutions - Rs 500/-
>
> Prices are for sale within India. Please add Rs 30/- for postage.
>
> Payment should be made by demand draft in favour of National Institute of
> Advanced Studies.  Orders may be placed with:
>
>     Dean - Administration
>     National Institute of Advanced Studies
>     Indian Institute of Science Campus
>     Bangalore 560012
>     Tel: 080-23604351 ; Fax: 080-23606634
>     Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> Please copy your orders to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> With best regards,
>
> Carol Upadhya
>
> Visiting Associate Fellow, Sociology and Social Anthropology
> National Institute of Advanced Studies
> Indian Institute of Science Campus
> Bangalore 560012  India
>
> office:  +91-80-23604351 ext 267
> cell:      +91-93413-11453
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
>
>
>
____________________________________________________________________________
_______________________________
>
> About the films:
> Coding Culture – Bangalore's Software Industry
>
> A series of three films by Gautam Sonti
>
> in collaboration with Carol Upadhya
>
> produced by National Institute of Advanced Studies, Bangalore, India
>
> supported by Indo-Dutch Programme for Alternatives in Development,
>
> The Netherlands
>
>
>
> The Indian software outsourcing industry has emerged as a key node of the
> global economy. The series of ethnographic films, Coding Culture:
> Bangalore's Software Industry, explores the cultures of outsourced work
and
> the moulding of a new workforce to cater to this global high-tech services
> industry. Each of the three films focuses on a single company,
representing
> one of the major types of software company found in Bangalore: a
> medium-sized Indian-owned company software services company (Mphasis: The
> 'M' Way); the offshore software development centre of a U.S.-based IT
> company (Sun Microsystems: [EMAIL PROTECTED]); and a small 'cross-border' 
> startup
> company that produces its own software products and markets them to global
> customers (July Systems: July Boys). All three companies are engaged in
the
> production of software products or services for markets outside of India,
> but the nature of their work and their position in the global economy
> differ, producing significant variations in their cultures of work. Each
> film revolves around a distinct theme that is central to the outsourcing
> industry as a whole, but that also has wider sociological significance:
the
> systems of time and people management that are typical of these new global
> workplaces; the functioning of multicultural 'virtual teams' and the
> absorption of Indian software engineers into a global corporate culture;
and
> the new identities that are emerging in this highly transnational sector
of
> the Indian economy.
> The 'M' Way: Time + People = Money
>
> The 'M' Way was shot inside MphasiS Limited, a medium-sized Indian IT
> software services company that typifies this highly competitive business,
in
> which the provision of high quality and low-cost service is the key to
> attracting and retaining customers. The film focuses on two teams (one for
> software development and one for testing, or quality control) that work on
a
> single project for a U.S.-based customer, depicting the high-pressure work
> atmosphere that prevails in this industry. Activities must be tightly
> coordinated within and between the project teams, and also with the
customer
> site, with which the Indian engineers are in constant communication.
>
> Fun @ Sun: Making of a Global Workplace
>
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] is an inside look at work and work culture in the software
> development centre of a large American multinational company, Sun
> Microsystems, located in Bangalore (Indian Engineering Centre, or IEC).
The
> film highlights the multiple ways in which 'culture' operates as a
> management tool in the new global economy. In offshore centres such as
IEC,
> work is organised through 'virtual teams' comprised of software engineers
> and managers located in Bangalore and Santa Clara, U.S.A. To integrate
their
> employees and sites across cultural and geographical space, Sun attempts
to
> initiate the Indian software engineers into Sun's corporate culture. The
> film depicts the techniques through which this American-style work culture
> is transplanted into the Indian subsidiary, such as induction programmes
and
> 'soft skills' training programmes.
>
>  The film also points to the contradictory ways in which 'culture' is
> invoked in the global corporate workplace: while cultural sensitivity
> training programmes validate cultural difference, Indian software
engineers
> are expected to conform to the dominant model of global corporate culture
by
> learning appropriate communication and behavioural styles.
>
> July Boys: New Global Players
>
> July Boys focuses on a small 'startup' company in Bangalore that designs
and
> produces software products for cellular service providers in Europe and
the
> U.S. Turning the tables on the usual outsourcing story, July Systems has
> leveraged U.S.-based venture capital and Indian technical expertise to
break
> into the latest high-tech markets. The film explores the creation of a
> Silicon Valley-style work culture within this 'cross-border' company that
> has one leg in Bangalore and the other in Santa Clara, California. It also
> highlights the emergence of new kinds of identities (global,
transnational,
> cosmopolitan) that incorporate and transcend pre-existing identities such
as
> the national (Indian) and the regional (Tamil). But the narratives of the
> film's characters reveal a tension between their assumed global
subjectivity
> and their nationalist pride in July's achievements as a company founded
and
> run by Indians that makes 'cutting edge products' for the global market.
>
>
>
>
>
> --
> This message has been scanned for viruses and
> dangerous content by MailScanner, and is
> believed to be clean.


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