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Uday Bhaskar

Uday Bhaskar

Mr. Uday Bhaskar Nandivada is an enterprise architect and an authority on emerging trends in communications technology and a leading evangelist of TeleManagement Forum’s New Generation Operational Support Systems (NGOSS). He has over twenty three years of experience in architecting and implementing complex enterprise level solutions for a wide range of industries and business models. For the last nine years he has been working exclusively with telecommunications, media and entertainment service providers, providing strategic advisory services to Tier one carriers around the globe including AT&T, Sprint, Comcast, Directv, Telstra, Sprint, Telkom South Africa, FarEastern Telecom, etc. 

He is currently the Global Technology Solutions Lead with Amdocs Consulting, in which capacity he has led the development and successful launch of five holistic world-class technology solutions to address critical business needs of the world’s leading telecommunications and media providers.  Prior to joining Amdocs, Mr. Nandivada was a part of the Cable & Media Leadership team for Capgemini Inc., where he successfully led the implementation of several complex OSS/BSS Integration projects for more than ten major service providers. Earlier, he was a solution architect for AT&T’s Texas Local Factory. He may be reached at uday_n@sbcglobal.net.

Teleology of Telecommunications Technology - UNIX by Accident

Teleology of Telecommunications Technology - UNIX by Accident

Mon, Dec 15, 2008

Contrary to popular opinion, technology does not always follow a purposeful path of evolution. Spectacularly successful inventions have often been solutions in search of a problem. UNIX on the other hand is a case all by itself.

Less is More - How Digital Trumped Analog

Less is More - How Digital Trumped Analog

Mon, Mar 23, 2009

When you tap your feet to a Beyonce song, it is easy to forget that her voice went through a long journey before reaching your ears. A single three minute track like “Single Ladies” gets translated into several millions of 0’s and 1’s sitting on a hard drive or an MP3 player, as opposed to a few grooves on a vinyl disk or a few inches of a cassette tape. Why then is the world moving away from analog to digital?