B. G. Mahesh
B. G. Mahesh | |
---|---|
Occupation | Founder & Managing Director - Greynium Information Technologies Pvt. Ltd. |
B. G. Mahesh is an Indian Information Technology entrepreneur. Mahesh is a pioneer in the Indian Internet,[1] being active since 1992. Being at the forefront of Internet and Information Technology, he has to his credit initiating Portal Communications, with Mahesh.com being one of the most popular Indian portals during the mid-1990s. Mahesh also co-founded Indiainfo.com.[2] Under his leadership, Indiainfo.com survived the Dot-com bust and saw multifold growth over the years, to gain a preeminent position.
Early life
Mahesh received his graduate degree in computer science from the University of Alabama at Birmingham and his undergraduate degree from the SJCE, University of Mysore. He initiated channels for NRIs to congregate and communicate with his portal Mahesh.com, which now functions as his Blog.
Present
He is the Founder & Managing Director of Greynium Information Technologies Pvt. Ltd.,[3] an Internet applications development services company. Greynium also owns Oneindia.in[4] and Click.in. Greynium was acquired by Mumbai based Netcore Solutions Pvt Ltd in April 2010.[5] Narendra Modi Appoints Rajesh Jain and BG Mahesh To Drive His Social Media Campaign For 2014 Elections[6]
References
- ↑ Katiyar, Arun (17 November 1997). "Cyberchatter: Community Thinking". India Today. Retrieved 29 May 2011.
- ↑ "Note on Indiainfo".
- ↑ "NextIsWhat website".
- ↑ "MXM India".
- ↑ "NetCore acquires Greynium, owner of India's leading Local Languages and Classifieds Portals". OneIndia. 4 May 2010. Retrieved 29 May 2011.
- ↑ http://lighthouseinsights.in/narendra-modi-appoints-rajesh-jain-and-bg-mahesh-to-drive-his-social-media-campaign-for-2014-elections.html
External links
- Mahesh.com blog
- Growth pangs of Indian languages: Deccan Herald
- Britons take it out on Indian BPO workers
- Twitter @ 5, still gaining traction here
- Mobilising support for freedom on the Web
- India’s Ybrant acquires Lycos for $36 million
- Sify to stop supporting lower-speed customers, shift focus to enterprises services