Udupi has a strong academic background because its a center
of Dwaita philosophy as well as a major Univeristy Town (it has Manipal University, I study here).
Tidbit: Satya Nadela is a Manipal alumnus. So is Rajiv Suri of Nokia.
I have often wondered about this coming of age of Manipal university. In my times it was primarily a place for those students who could not find admission anywhere else in India through merit, as measured by board examinations of course, but had parents who could buy a seat for the kid with a fantastic sum of money.
> students who could not find admission anywhere else in India through merit, as measured by board examinations of course, but had parents who could buy a seat for the kid with a fantastic sum of money.
Well, I don't know much about the past but that is certainly not so much the case now. Sure, everybody still wants to get into the IITs, and the peer quality here is not a match for say, IIT Bombay, but there are some very good people here. I myself could have gotten myself into a public school, but chose Manipal because of it's exposure life quality. I suspect that is the major driving factor for students.
There are no bought seats now. And there are heavy scholarships for meritorious students too. And this is just talking about the engineering school.
The Med School here, KMC, is one of the best in the country without a doubt (even though shit expensive).
It doesn't really matter how you get an education. What's important is you get it. I still don't understand why its still such a big deal between paid and government seats; merit or non-merit. As long as education is being provided, its great.
We have to understand the nature of Private universities in India. Their primary source of revenue is either some generous patron/family (Tata/Birla etc.) or, more commonly, the students themselves. Its very different from the US, where alumni connections are strong and alums often make sizeable donations to their alma mater.
Are you not romanticizing it and projecting your own beliefs? There are other lots of smaller places but having good institutions which don't get to have a good Startup ecosystem, or even a single startup, unless somebody chooses to.
I would proffer this happened because the founder Rohith Bhat settled down there (probably his home town) after having stints in Japan and lot of experience developing for Apple. And he got the advantage of hiring cheap from the Manipal University, with a mix of 3 year bond which throwaway43 has explained, to keep people from running away to lucrative places like Bangalore very near by.
This company also reminds me of Zoho for some reason. Which has a back office in Chennai, started by a Bay area veteran Sridhar Vembu. I guess, thats a better run Startup in terms of HR at least, in comparison.