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Dive into the research topics where Murali Krishna Medudula is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Murali Krishna Medudula.


Management and labour studies | 2014

An Analysis of Barriers for the Adoption of Cloud Computing in Education Sector

Tajinder Singh Sahdev; Murali Krishna Medudula; Mahim Sagar

Cloud computing is an emerging field in information technology, aimed to have access to the IT services anytime, anywhere by authorized personnel. Having wide range of benefits for the organizations or institutes extending to diverse areas including like cost cutting, multi-tenancy, better management of business, highly automated, scalable to suite the ever-changing needs of the organizations or institutes. In the current scenario every emerging and established enterprise wants to implement cloud computing to fulfil their computing needs. If we look at the penetration of education in all regions, there is a dramatic shift from the traditional IT infrastructure offering towards cloud computing. If we go deeper it is evident that with the increase in the number of institutions offering education, cloud computing has come out as a very cost-effective solution for computing and infrastructure needs. This study is an attempt to identify and analyze the key barriers to the adoption of cloud computing in the education sector. Total interpretive structural modelling (TISM) has been used to further develop a hierarchy amongst the various key barriers to cloud adoption in the education sector. This model is intended to classify various barriers to the adoption of cloud computing and for planning of successful infusion of new technologies in the education sector.


Archive | 2016

Telecom Value Chain and Telecom Markets—Enterprise, Retail and Application Development

Murali Krishna Medudula; Mahim Sagar; Ravi Parkash Gandhi

Value can be defined in many ways and is a function of the dimensions employed in a study. For the purpose of this chapter, the use of the word “value” is restricted to its common definition, as the amount buyers are willing to pay for a product or service. The concept of the value chain was first popularized by Michael Porter in a seminal work on the implementation of competitive strategies to enhance business performance.


Archive | 2016

Costing and Pricing Mechanism of Telecom Services

Murali Krishna Medudula; Mahim Sagar; Ravi Parkash Gandhi

The telecommunication (or telecom) sector is of critical importance to the economy of any country. Telecommunication services are vital for overall economic development. The Indian telecom sector has witnessed phenomenal growth over the past decades and is now the second largest telecom market in the world.


Archive | 2016

Telecommunication Policy—Concerns and Suggestions

Murali Krishna Medudula; Mahim Sagar; Ravi Parkash Gandhi

The overwhelming growth of telecommunications in India can largely be attributed to the liberalization of the sector and the prolonged efforts of the licensor, the regulator and the Industry. Many of us have lived through an era of telecommunications when simply acquiring a fixed telephone line could take up to a whole year, and may be even longer depending on where it was to be situated. The same process can now be completed in no more than a few days. The ubiquitous availability of telecommunications services is often taken for granted, and we tend to forget about a time when owning a fixed line was considered a privilege.


Archive | 2016

Telecom Evolution and Role of Regulatory Bodies: The Indian Perspective

Murali Krishna Medudula; Mahim Sagar; Ravi Parkash Gandhi

The invention of the electric telegraph in 1837 and the telephone by Alexander Graham Bell in 1876 led to the birth of a new industry that had the vision and the very real potential to broadcast voice and music and eventually become a platform for data services. The introduction of PSTN by Bell Systems afforded commercial viability and investment incentives to businesses. PSTN relied on circuit switching which became the core concept to provide voice services to the public.


Archive | 2016

Overview of Fourth-Generation Mobile Technology

Murali Krishna Medudula; Mahim Sagar; Ravi Parkash Gandhi

The growth of mobile communications can most appropriately be paralleled with the scope and pace advocated by the very general yet strangely accurate Moore’s Law. Such has been the nature of technological development over the last decade that even consumers have come to expect growth at such momentum.


Archive | 2016

Telecommunication Standards and Growth: Evolutionary Process

Murali Krishna Medudula; Mahim Sagar; Ravi Parkash Gandhi

Telecommunication networks are fundamental for the overall economic development of any nation. According to a study by ICRIER (2009), Indian States which achieve an increment of 10 % in mobile penetration can expect to have 1.2 % increase in their average growth rate.


Archive | 2016

Telecom Networks and Innovation

Murali Krishna Medudula; Mahim Sagar; Ravi Parkash Gandhi

Telecom Industry is buzzing with huge growth of mobile users not only because of voice telephony but with increased pace of adoption of social media applications such as Twitter, Skype, Facebook, YouTube and WhatsApp.


Archive | 2016

Telecom Players, Regulatory Bodies, International Organizations and Regional Telecom Statistics: Global Overview

Murali Krishna Medudula; Mahim Sagar; Ravi Parkash Gandhi

Technology and regulation are key drivers for telecom growth in emerging economies. Technology facilitates improved services and creates market conducive for growth. The evolution of technology decreases costs and facilitates rapid growth phase that appeals to many industry players. With an increasing number of players, each striving for larger market shares, regulation is critical and necessary to promote growth and harmony in the sector. Regulations ensure that fair practices are adopted by telecom operators in their efforts to increase and maintain market shares.


Archive | 2016

Introduction to Spectrum Management

Murali Krishna Medudula; Mahim Sagar; Ravi Parkash Gandhi

Radio spectrum is the invisible lifeline for mobile communications. The invention of the base station architecture by Bell Labs and the development of technological standards enabled handsets to become truly mobile.

Collaboration


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Mahim Sagar

Indian Institute of Technology Delhi

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Ravi Parkash Gandhi

Indian Institute of Technology Delhi

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Rojalin Pradhan

Indian Institute of Technology Delhi

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