Hi-Tech Solutions, IoT & Smart Manufacturing | Driving AI-led industrial transformation | Turning data into real business impact | Building future of industry

Joined September 2019
23 Photos and videos
Deepak Joshi retweeted
Meet us at the 17th Annual Clinical Trials Summit 2026 in Mumbai! Mayur Gadekar from Fidel is looking forward to connecting with professionals and discussing Healthcare & Life Sciences Localization (L10N) solutions. Learn more: fidelsoftech.com/case-studie… #ClinicalTrialsSummit2026
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Deepak Joshi retweeted
Copying Western systems won't cut it. China succeeded because they built infrastructure tailored strictly to their own geography and resource realities. India has a completely unique landscape—literally and figuratively. Borrowed blueprints won't solve homegrown challenges. We need ground-up, indigenous systems built specifically for our context. 🇮🇳 #aicanoptiwise #AtmanirbharBharat #TechSovereignty #Growth
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Deepak Joshi retweeted
The biggest manufacturing lesson I learned wasn't in India. It was in China. What surprised me wasn't the technology. It wasn't robots. It wasn't AI. It was operational discipline. Even relatively small factories had: • live visibility • digital records • clear processes • predictable execution Nothing looked revolutionary. But everything worked. And that's the part most people miss. Manufacturing competitiveness is rarely built through breakthroughs. It's built through consistency. India has incredible entrepreneurs. Incredible engineers. Incredible operators. What we're missing is systems. Not everywhere. But at scale. Imagine what happens when millions of MSMEs stop operating through WhatsApp groups, memory, and follow-ups. Imagine if every factory owner could spend more time improving the business than chasing updates. That's the opportunity. Not just for Optiwise. For Indian manufacturing itself. The next decade won't belong to factories with the cheapest labor. It will belong to factories with the fastest decision-making. Do you think Indian manufacturing can close that gap within 10 years?
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Deepak Joshi retweeted
Forged in Operation Sindoor. India’s AI-powered anti-drone shield has arrived. Bharat’s enemies… watch out. 💥 Zen Technologies has unveiled India's first fully integrated AI-powered anti-drone system. It is capable of detecting/tracking 100 drones simultaneously, with radar up to 20km & optical beyond 15km. Soft kill (70MHz-12GHz jamming) Hard kill integration. Already battle-proven in Operation Sindoor. From simulators to full-spectrum C-UAS, Zen is executing a clear strategy: indigenous IP, sensor fusion, AI command centre, plus acquisitions in UAV propulsion (Vector Technics) & robotics. This is Make in India in action: reducing imports, building sovereign capability against swarm threats, and positioning India as a defence exporter. Strong order book & repeat business (90% revenue) signal massive growth ahead for Atmanirbhar Bharat. @SpokespersonMoD @ZenTechnologies #Defense #Drones #Swarms By @Dalipjourno
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Deepak Joshi retweeted
Fidel is attending the 17th Annual Clinical Trials Summit 2026. Meet Mayur Gadekar, Marketing Manager, Fidel Softech, at the event. Date: 10-11 June 2026 Loc.: World Trade Center (WTC), Mumbai #ClinicalTrialsSummit #ClinicalTrialsSummitMumbai #ClinicalTrialsSummit2026Mumbai
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Deepak Joshi retweeted
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Deepak Joshi retweeted
Replying to @ANI
A big W for Make in india electronics manufacturing! Let's keep building... x.com/i/status/2044765696270…

Big W for Make in India manufacturing. 📲 Why @Apple's India vendors exporting $2.5B components to China is massive 👇 A. Reverses decades of one-way import flow. B. Shows deeper localization & value addition. C. PLI/ECMS policies hitting targets early. D. India becoming indispensable in global supply chains. End of assembly-only era. ✅️ Deeper manufacturing, higher value addition, stronger ecosystem. @kiranrathee1 #mobile #manufacturing
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Deepak Joshi retweeted
Most people know Wipro as an IT giant. Very few know it started as a cooking oil company. And that's exactly why the story of Azim Premji matters. In 1966, a 21-year-old Azim Premji was studying at Stanford when he received a call that changed everything. His father had passed away. He had to return to India immediately and take charge of the family business. The company? Western India Vegetable Products. A manufacturer of cooking oil. Not software. Not technology. Not consulting. Just cooking oil. Most people in his position would have focused on improving the existing business: • Increase sales • Reduce costs • Expand distribution Premji thought differently. Instead of asking: "How do we grow this business?" He asked: "What business should we be in 20 years from now?" That single question changed Wipro's future. Over the next decade, the company experimented across multiple industries: • Consumer products • Industrial equipment • Engineering products Some succeeded. Many didn't. But every experiment built capability. Then came the boldest decision. Computers. At a time when India's technology ecosystem barely existed, Premji saw something most people couldn't. Technology wasn't a trend. It was the future. The interesting part is that he didn't transform Wipro overnight. He didn't bet everything on one big move. Instead, he: • Hired talent • Built systems • Learned patiently • Improved continuously Step by step. That's a lesson many Indian MSMEs need today. Everyone wants: • AI immediately • Automation immediately • Industry 4.0 immediately But world-class companies are rarely transformed in one leap. They are built through capability building. One system. One process. One improvement at a time. Today, Wipro is one of India's most respected technology companies. But its biggest achievement wasn't entering IT. It was successfully reinventing itself. And that may be the most important lesson for Indian manufacturing. Because the factories that dominate the next decade won't necessarily be the biggest. They'll be the ones that adapt the fastest. Question for manufacturing owners: If your factory disappeared tomorrow and you had to start again from scratch... Would you build the same business again?
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Deepak Joshi retweeted
This afternoon, went to the L&T complex at Hazira. Witnessed some of their pioneering innovations across different sectors. The role played by L&T in furthering self-reliance in the defence sector is commendable. @larsentoubro
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Deepak Joshi retweeted
AI developers help businesses build intelligent applications, automate workflows and unlock value from data. FidelSoft provides experienced AI developers on contract, helping businesses access specialized AI expertise quickly and flexibly. fidelsoft.com/ai-developers-… #AIDevelopers
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Deepak Joshi retweeted
Super writing
USA. Summer. It is 95 degrees outside, and I am shivering inside a sandwich shop. I have discovered how Americans forge strong souls. Outside, the sun is trying to kill everyone. Inside this small restaurant, it is winter. My breath does not fog, but it is thinking about it. A man near me is eating a cold sandwich while wearing a jacket. In summer. Indoors. In Japan we would simply turn it down. Americans do not turn it down. And now I understand them better than they understand themselves. This cold is not an accident. This cold is a gift. The owner has built, inside his shop, a second season. He invites you in from the brutal heat and hands you the one thing the sun has denied you all day: a reason to be cold. To endure it is to be tempered. You walk in soft and sweating. You walk out sharp and clear, a slightly stronger person than you were. So I did not complain. I removed my outer layer and offered it to the woman at the next table, who was hugging herself. She said, "Oh, no, I'm fine, thank you." She was not fine. Her lips were blue. But she, too, understood the training. She would not break first. I respected her deeply. The owner asked if everything was okay. "It is perfect," I said, through my teeth, which were chattering. "Thank you for the winter." He said, "...I can turn the AC down if you want?" I told him no. A man does not ask the mountain to be shorter. I stayed two hours. I ordered a hot coffee to survive. Then a second one, to hold. By the end I could no longer feel my hands, but my spirit had never been clearer. So now, on the hottest days, I seek out the coldest rooms. I sit. I shiver. I sharpen. And when I finally step back out into the summer heat, and it wraps around me like a warm bath, I feel it. Reborn. A man who has survived the winter, in August, indoors, for the price of a sandwich.
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Deepak Joshi retweeted
Protein black coffee
Advanced technology from Japan
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Japan software projects demand precision, planning, and clear communication. @FidelTech supports Japan software projects with consulting, development, testing, project management & bilingual Japanese expertise. fideltech.com/japan-software… #JapanSoftwareProjectSupport #JapanMarket
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Deepak Joshi retweeted
This is what I admire about @ideaforge_tech ! If you look into their components and supply chain, everything is developed in-house and manufactured in India. FC, RTX, VTX,GS and mission planner everything is developed by them. This is some remarkable achievement to do during their early stage. To achieve this they should have had some awesome team.
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Deepak Joshi retweeted
Shree swami samarth.. #japan
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Pharma Localization Services help make medical and healthcare content clear, accurate and accessible across languages. Filose supports multilingual localization for clinical, regulatory and healthcare communication needs. filose.com/pharmaceutical-tr… #PharmaLocalizationServices
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Deepak Joshi retweeted
Indian scientists just made history. Researchers from IIT Madras and IISc Bengaluru just pulled off something impossible. They've created the world's "first carbon-free ferrocene". This means we can finally build the next generation of incredibly durable tech. Let me explain. See, ferrocene is this wild organometallic molecule - where an iron atom is perfectly sandwiched between two carbon rings. But it’s insanely stable. Which is why it is already used in rocket fuels, car gasoline additives, long-life batteries, and even cancer medicines. And for the last 75 years, everyone thought it was impossible to build the same stable structure without using carbon. But this team of Indian scientists proved everyone wrong. They created the same perfect sandwich structure - by swapping iron for osmium and carbon rings for boron rings. And what they got was the world's first carbon-free ferrocene - which is so much stronger than the carbon bonds. By doing so - they've opened up a whole new era of chemistry. And we have no idea how many amazing things we might discover. But to think all of this started in India is truly amazing. Kudos to everyone on this team: Sundargopal Ghosh, Stutee Mohapatra, Suvam Saha, Urvashi Gupta, Deepak Patel - from IIT Madras, Gaurav Joshi and Eluvathingal D. Jemmis - from IISc Bengaluru.
Researchers from IIT Madras and IISc Bengaluru have solved a chemistry puzzle that remained unanswered for over 70 years. As reported in The Indian Express, the team led by Prof. Sundargopal Ghosh and Stutee Mohapatra from the Department of Chemistry, IIT Madras, along with Prof. Eluvathingal Jemmis from IISc Bengaluru, has synthesised a carbon-free molecule that mimics the iconic ‘sandwich’ structure of ferrocene. Using osmium and boron-based rings instead of carbon, the breakthrough marks the first stable carbon-free version of the molecule — something scientists worldwide had long attempted to achieve. Published in the prestigious journal Science (science.org/doi/10.1126/scie…), the discovery could open new pathways for designing advanced materials with unique chemical and structural properties. Read more: indianexpress.com/article/in… @IndianExpress @iitmadras @iiscbangalore @amitabhsin
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Deepak Joshi retweeted
Cabinet cleared ₹37,500 crore for coal gasification. Target: 75 million tonnes per year, scaling to 100 MT by 2030. Here's the catch. India has 401 billion tonnes of coal reserves. Massive. But our coal runs 30-45% ash content vs 10-15% globally. Every gasifier design from GE, Shell, Siemens was engineered for low-ash coal. They don't work with what we've got. So this isn't just a subsidy. It's a bet on building indigenous gasification tech that actually fits our geology. If it clicks — ₹60,000 to ₹90,000 crore per year in saved LNG, urea, ammonia imports. That's not a scheme. That's a strategic capability we've never had.
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Deepak Joshi retweeted
India barely had a drone industry five years ago. Today — IdeaForge listed, Zen Technologies exporting, PLI 2.0 being finalized with nearly ₹2,000 crore committed to the ecosystem. The interesting bit isn't the money. It's what happened when they simplified airspace regulations and cut clearance layers. Entrepreneurs showed up overnight. Most PLI schemes throw money at capacity. This one threw deregulation at an industry. Might be the best ROI per rupee.
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Fidel is looking for Marathi Language Voice Recording Freelancer. ~ Task: Record 220 Marathi utterances through a mobile application ~ Device Required: mobile ~ Location: WFH ~ Age: 18 Apply here - docs.google.com/forms/d/1Bgy… #MarathiSpeakers #MarathiLanguage #MarathiJobs #Marathi
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