Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
This is a list of companies based in Gurgaon. Gurgaon , also known as Gurugram, is a cities in the Indian state of Haryana , located immediately south of the National Capital Territory of Delhi , 32 kilometres (20 mi) southwest of New Delhi and 268 km (167 mi) southeast of Chandigarh , the capital of India's Punjab state.
Main article: Information technology in India TCS Office at SIPCOT, Siruseri Cyber Gateway Madhapur Hyderabad near Raheja Mindspace TCS at Voltas House, Jamshedpur Wipro headquarters at Sarjapura Road, Electronic City, Bengaluru This is a list of notable companies in the information technology sector based in India. Top Indian companies are listed in descending order of their market ...
Aricent is the successor to Hughes Software Systems, which was established in 1991, as a subsidiary of Hughes Electronics, [3] with funding from Sequoia Capital. [ 4 ] [ 5 ] 1985: Future Software Communications founded by KV Ramani, a TCP/IP stack developer from India which will eventually merge with Hughes Software Systems.
Hughes Systique Corporation, (HSC) is a provider of software R&D services. [1] As part of its R&D services, HSC provides Technology Consulting, System Architecture design, Software development, Maintenance and Testing services to Multimedia, Consumer Devices, Telecom/Networking, Wireless/Broadband and Satellite equipment providers.
Manufacturing companies based in Gurgaon (1 C, 13 P) Pages in category "Companies based in Gurgaon" The following 62 pages are in this category, out of 62 total.
DLF Cyber City is a commercial area in Gurugram, Haryana, India, which was opened in 2003.The area is home to several top IT and Fortune 500 company offices. [1] The area has been termed a "futuristic commercial hub" [2] and is considered one of the largest hubs of IT activity in Delhi NCR.
Xchanging was founded in 1999, by David Andrews, a former partner in Andersen Consulting.Andrews came up with the idea at Andersen Consulting, to create joint ventures with multinational companies to outsource the processing of back-office transactions.
The service was reviewed by Michael Muchmore [23] for PC Mag in April 2014 and was awarded two stars out of five. The review praised the service's low cost, polite staff, and privacy warnings, but found it performed poorly, with limited tools and cleanup, remarking that iYogi was once the value leader, but other services were now preferable in light of its lackluster performance.