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The first computer in East Pakistan was an IBM mainframe 1620 series, installed in 1964 at the Dhaka center of the Pakistan Atomic Energy Commission (later the Bangladesh Atomic Energy Commission). Computer use increased in the following years, especially after the independence of Bangladesh in 1971; more-advanced IT equipment began to be set ...
On 18 January 2018, Walton launched the country's first computer and laptop manufacturing plant. In April 2018, Samsung announced the assembling of smartphones in Bangladesh in their new factory in collaboration with Fair Electronics, and the factory commenced production of smartphones in May 2018.
Bangladesh Computer Samity, popularly known as BCS, is the national association of information and communication technologies companies in Bangladesh. It was established in 1987 in Dhaka, Bangladesh. It was established in 1987 in Dhaka, Bangladesh.
It was initially known as the National Computer Committee (NCC) in 1983 and transformed into the Bangladesh Computer Council through Act No. 9 of the National Parliament in 1990. [1] Since its inception, the BCC has been an important advocate for the country's technological development, specifically in information and communications technology ...
Team 71 has been called the "pioneer of the computer game development" era of Bangladesh after 2010. In 2014, Hatirjheel: Dream Begins, an open-world action-adventure game, was developed and published by MassiveStar Studio. It was the first commercially published video game in Bangladesh. [9]
Following the 2001 general election, the Ministry of Science and Technology (Bangladesh) was renamed on 18 September 2002 to become the Ministry of Science and Information & Communication Technology.
The bodies of a California mother of three and her 19-year-old son were found dead by her daughter days before the family was set to celebrate Christmas.
The number of Internet subscriptions in Bangladesh grew from 186,000 in 2000 to 617,300 in 2009. [4] However, only 0.4% of the population used the Internet in 2009 giving Bangladesh one of the lowest usage percentages in the world, ahead of only North Korea, Myanmar, and Sierra Leone. [5]