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THE TUG OF OPPORTUNITIES
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C.V. Radhakrishnan's River BankTechnologies has become a byword forexcellence in the world of scientific publishing.He tells SARASWATHY NAGARAJAN how his passwordfor survival opened up a cyber universe ofopportunities
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CAPTAIN OF HIS DESTINY Chandroth Vasudevan Radhakrishnan PHOTOS : S. MAHINSHA
When Chandroth Vasudevan Radhakrishnan
was told that he had
just five more years to live, little
did the 24-year-old radical and
rolling stone ever imagine that it would
begin a new life for him and hundreds of
others as well. And also eventually open
a new chapter in the nascent outsourcing
scene of Kerala that would put rustic
Malayankizh on the global publishing
map. His clients include prestigious
publications Nature, giant publication
houses such as Elsevier (leading publisher
of scientific and medical journals
such as The Lancet and Cell) and institutions
such as the Institute of Physics
and Cambridge University Press.
More than two decades later, the 56-
year-old frail-looking CEO of the River
Valley Technologies laughs when he
looks back at his knee-jerk reaction that
made him quit his government job
when he was diagnosed with perennial
muscular dystrophy. "I decided to
spend the rest of my days with my parents.
But they felt I was joking and kept
nagging me to take up a job. So I moved
in with friends in Thiruvananthapuram
- the city I love. After a year, I was still
alive and there were four years to go.
Since I did not want to burden my
friends, I decided to take up a job. A
chain of events related to my illness led
to the founding of my company," recalls
Radhakrishnan, laughing loudly.
A best in the business
And why not! Sitting amidst his employees
in a sprawling hall of the ecofriendly
four-acre campus, he is able to
look back with pride on the achievements
of his firm. Ranked as one of the
best in the world of scientific publishing,
RVT proves that ethics, ideals and
commerce can exist harmoniously. But
for a few applications such as Photoshop
and Illustrator, most of their work is
done by science graduates with the help
of free or open software.
Even the name of the company has a
story behind it that Radhakrishan narrates
with glee: "I was born on the bank
of a river; rivers have always nurtured
civilization. Most importantly, I hated
the thought of a name with system or
info in it. I wanted to prove that you
can run a successful company without
the trappings of a corporate world. Look
at our office," he says.
True, there are no air-conditioned
halls or tie-clad executives. The beautifully
landscaped eco-friendly campus
with solar energy and rain water harvesting
facilities must be unique in the
IT world. "So much of energy is wasted
on air-conditioning and artificial lighting,
all of which can be avoided if we
plan and build carefully," avers Radhakrishnan
with evangelical zest. He
emphasises that he owes it all to Donald
Knut, the founder of TeX, the language
that helped Radhakrishnan master the
language of business too. "Prior to
learning TeX, I had taken up a job as a
clerk in the University of Kerala," says
Radhakrishnan. A second opinion had
confirmed the initial diagnosis. Shrugging
aside the fear, anger, pain and frustration,
he decided to befriend the
computer to stave off loneliness when
he would eventually be "an alert mind
trapped in a dumb body."
"That was when Professor KSF Nambooripad
of the Department of Maths of
the University of Kerala suggested that
I learn TeX, a complex language that is
necessary to typeset and print mathematical
and scientific matter," narrates
Radhakrishnan. Beginning with question
papers of the University of Kerala
and research papers of the students,
Radhakrishnan went on to publish Entomon,
an entomology journal of the
Department of Zoology, which he still
continues to publish.
Popular with the students
"I became very popular with the students.
Initially, I did not take money for
my work but then I had to repay a housing
loan and so I began to accept money,"
remembers Radhakrishnan. But
then the idealist in him became uncomfortable
with his moonlighting and so
he again quit his job and set up his firm -
River Valley Technologies.
"Thanks to the Central government's
Software Technology Park, we had good
infrastructure and tax breaks too. But
we had to achieve an export target of
one million dollars. Without any contacts
or networking, I had no clue how
to go about it," remembers
Radhakrishnan.
By then his work on free software
(TeX is one) had put him in touch with
Sebastian Rahtz, an employee of Elsevier
and a member of the TeX Users'
Group (TUG) in the United Kingdom.
He motivated Radhakrishnan to begin a
similar group in India and soon the first
meeting was held in the city on December
15, 1996.
"As luck would have it, his e-mail to
TeX User Groups in the world announcing
the formation of our group reached
Kaveh Bazargan, a publisher and TUG
member in the U.K. who was planning
to visit India on a working holiday. We
met and entered into a partnership that
merged into one company in 1997." A
symbiotic relationship that has seen
RVT move from strength to strength.
Profit is not his motive; it is the wellbeing
of his employees and the perfection
of their work that motivate him.
His idealism and altruism influence
each aspect of the company and its
blueprint for the future. Truly a person
who firmly believes that he is the captain
of his destiny.
What is TeX?
TeX is a typesetting system written by Donald E. Knuth. According to him: it is “intended for the creation of beautiful books — and especially for books that contain a lot of mathematics.” (If TeX were only good for mathematical books, much of its use nowadays would not happen: it's actually a pretty good general typesetting system.) Knuth is Emeritus Professor of the Art of Computer Programming at Stanford University in California, US. Knuth developed the first version of TeX in 1978 to deal with revisions to his series “the Art of Computer Programming.” The idea proved popular and Knuth produced a second version (in 1982) which is the basis of what we use today.
(Source: Internet)
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Bangalore
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