This is how robots could help us to live longer
Bhaskar Chakravorti discusses the possibility of 'edible electronics'.
BA (Hons) in Economics, Delhi Univ.; MA, Delhi School of Economics; PhD in Economics and Univ. Fellow, Univ. of Rochester. More than 25 years as consultant and educator. Formerly: Partner, McKinsey & Co. and Leader, Innovation and Global Forces practices and Member, Knowledge Services Cttee; Faculty, Harvard Business School and Harvard Univ. Center for the Environment; Distinguished Scholar, MIT Legatum Center for Dev. and Entrepreneurship; Partner and Thought Leader, Monitor Group; Faculty, Bellcore, Univ. of Illinois; Officer, TAS. Currently, Senior Associate Dean, Int'l Business and Finance, The Fletcher School, Tufts Univ.; Founding Exec. Director, Institute for Business in the Global Context; Professor of Practice. Author: The Slow Pace of Fast Change: Bringing Innovations to Market in a Connected World; over 70 articles in peer-reviewed academic journals, newspaper articles and op-eds, book chapters and HBS case studies.
Bhaskar Chakravorti discusses the possibility of 'edible electronics'.
India has already overtaken the US, becoming the second largest smartphone market in the world, but Apple is yet to win over consumers.
Countries can learn from their better-connected peers, write Bhaskar Chakravorti and Ravi Shankar Chaturvedi.
These are some of the potential medical applications of 3D printing.
While the Fourth Industrial Revolution is the next big thing, we still need to spread the benefits of the preceding three, writes Bhaskar Chakravorti.