logo
Woxsen University Partners with IBM for Industry Calibrated Academic Programs

Woxsen University Partners with IBM for Industry Calibrated Academic Programs

PRNewswire
Hyderabad (Telangana) [India], June 9: Woxsen University has entered into a strategic MoU with IBM India Private Limited, an academic-industry collaboration poised to reshape the way business and technology education converge.
The five-year alliance spans the School of Business and School of Technology, with direct impact on the MBA (Business Analytics) and BBA (Data Science & Artificial Intelligence) programs. It introduces a unified learning framework where students across disciplines engage with enterprise-level tools and frameworks aligned with global business standards.
"Our partnership with IBM is not an add-on. It is a structural shift in how we envision higher education. By embedding enterprise-grade tools and certifications into the DNA of our curriculum, we are placing Woxsen students on the same technological footing as professionals in Fortune 500 companies. This alliance breaks down the traditional silos between business and technology education, enabling a business analyst to speak the language of AI and a data scientist to understand market strategy. This collaboration ensures our graduates are ready from day one and are equipped to lead with technological fluency, strategic sharpness and global agility." -- Dr. Raul Villamarin Rodriguez, Vice President, Woxsen University.
Through this collaboration, students gain structured access to IBM's suite of technologies, including artificial intelligence, blockchain, and advanced analytics platforms. Each participant receives globally acknowledged IBM certifications, embedded directly into academic delivery.
IBM's subject matter experts will engage closely with Woxsen's faculty to co-deliver training grounded in current industry practices and use cases. The pedagogical approach emphasizes applied learning, ensuring students build competencies that hold relevance from the outset of their careers.
The partnership further facilitates an integrated innovation environment. Students from business analytics, data science, and artificial intelligence work in interdisciplinary cohorts, reflecting the collaborative dynamics of modern enterprises. This environment enables learners to build strategic insight alongside technical acumen, equipping them to contribute meaningfully to technology led initiatives.
With curriculum co-developed alongside IBM and aligned with industry frameworks, graduates transition into the workforce with minimal adjustment. The alliance also strengthens career trajectories through IBM's extensive professional network, creating pathways for internships and early placements.
This initiative reflects the alignment of Woxsen'sinternational recognition with rankings from QS, Bloomberg, and IIRF and IBM's longstanding presence at the intersection of business and technology. The partnership brings together two institutions committed to cultivating leaders who understand both commercial imperatives and technological evolution.
The MoU introduces a dynamic structure for continuous academic enrichment, responsive to technological change and market demand. In an increasingly complex global business environment, this collaboration signals Woxsen's intent to prepare its students not only to participate in the digital economy, but to shape it.
About Woxsen University, Hyderabad:
Woxsen University, located in Hyderabad, is one of the first private universities in the state of Telangana, India. Renowned for its 200-acre state-of-the-art campus and infrastructure, Woxsen University offers new-age, disruptive programs in the fields of Business, Technology, Arts & Design, Architecture, Law, and Liberal Arts & Humanities. Woxsen also houses Asia's largest Sports Infrastructure, spread over 60 acres. With 170+ Global Partner Universities and a strong industry connect, Woxsen is recognized as one of the top universities for Academic Excellence and Global Edge. Woxsen has also secured the QS Business Masters World Ranking 2025, Rank #9 All India, Top 100 B-Schools by Times B-School Ranking 2025, Rank #6, Asia Pacific, Bloomberg Best B-School, and features in India's Best B-Schools beyond IIMs by Dalal Street Investment Journal 2025, in 4th consecutive year. Woxsen is ranked as one of the Top Professional Colleges in India by Outlook I-CARE for its undergraduate programs, securing All India Rank 12 among the Top 130 BBA Private Institutes, All India Rank 20 among the Top 160 B.Tech Private Institutes, All India Rank 3 among the Top 25 Design Private Institutes, and All India Rank 3 among the Top 30 B.Arch Private Institutes.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Is this year the beginning of the end of smartphones?
Is this year the beginning of the end of smartphones?

Hindustan Times

time41 minutes ago

  • Hindustan Times

Is this year the beginning of the end of smartphones?

Last month, a curious partnership in the Valley made me wonder on the future of smart devices and the way we access our digital universe. In a rather whimsical blog post, OpenAI announced the acquisition of Jony Ive's studio startup io for $6.5 billion. 'We have the opportunity to completely reimagine what it means to use a computer,' said Altman, adding that despite unprecedented capability and new technologies like AI, the digital experience is being shaped by traditional products and interfaces. A new technology like AI, he explained, requires a complete rethink of tools through which we interact with the digital universe. The first smartphone came into being in the early 1993, when IBM's Simon added email and fax to a phone's capability. (Representative photo) This acquisition would've become yet another corporate announcement, except for the timing of it. In the last couple of years, there's a feeling across Silicon Valley that smartphone as a device to interact with the digital world is not enough. New technologies like AR/VR, robotics and now AI need new products to explore them with. The new generation is approaching the digital world as an extension of themselves, through speech and not swiping or typing. As technology becomes more intuitive, we need new devices to reflect this change – more immersive and aural, devices that augment the real world and not take you away from it. Tech companies are putting their heads together to develop devices that are more immersive or approach digital through other senses like aural or even neural. Legacy companies like Meta, Apple and Google and startups like Neuralink are experimenting with smart glasses, wearables, iOT devices, smartwatches, neural computers and even spatial computers (like VisionPro) where digital media is integrated with our real-life experience. So far, none of these devices have worked, but it does feel like we're at a cusp of dramatic change. A senior vice president in Apple even acknowledged that in 10 years, iPhones could go the way of iPods - become irrelevant and retro. It's time for this change, I would say. After all, our way of interacting with digital spaces – through laptops, desktops and smart devices - has been the same for more than 30 years now. The first smartphone came into being in the early 1993, when IBM's Simon added email and fax to a phone's capability. In 1990s that there was a constant feeling of experimentation as the handheld phones and PDAs that could access the internet were being played with through product design. Companies across the world from USA to Japan wanted to integrate access to internet with a phone. The mid 2000s brought smartphones like Blackberry with QWERTY keyboards, which quickly made tapping and emailing the done thing to do. This changed dramatically when finger-operative touchscreen technology came out into the market. Within a couple of years in 2006, LG had used it to launch a touchscreen smartphone. And then Apple made it the new normal when it launched iPhones in 2007. Also Read: Do gaming smartphones really make sense in 2025? Though there have been amazing advances in the smartphone including camera capabilities, chip design and biometrics, the device design itself hasn't changed the way we interact with the digital world. There's a screen we swipe, touch and pinch. We check out social media, upload our photos on cloud and chat and email on the go. This staleness in the design was clear in Apple's recently concluded annual developer conference, WWDC 2025. The new iPhone 17 will be more or less the same as iPhone 16 with a few tiny tweaks. Jony Ive, whose company OpenAI acquired, was formerly Apple's chief design officer and led design teams for Apple's iconic products – the iPhone, the iPod and even the Macbook Pro – before leaving the company in 2019. This new project that he's working on, has got him (and us) excited. According to him, this time now, 2025, reminds him of three decades ago when he emigrated to Silicon Valley to design products that would interact with the Internet. 'I have a growing sense that everything I have learned over the last 30 years has led me to this moment,' he said in the acquisition announcement. The Wall Street Journal reported that Open AI is considering options that want to move consumers beyond screens into a unique combination of listening devices and cameras. 'Surely there's something beyond legacy products,' says Ive, adding that they've already built a prototype and are currently working on more AI-first devices. I know what you're thinking and frankly, I'm thinking the same. Smartphones are our lifelines. We do everything on these devices – from chatting to watching shorts and videos, to making payments on the go. We're multi-screen beasts today, our fingers constantly swiping or typing and ridden with RSI, our eyes fatigued. Also Read: AI needs to be open and inclusive like India Stack But the world is also changing in ways that make me think maybe we will use devices without screens as the enablers. Voice interaction has caught on. The way we fish for information is going from a typed search to a prompt we ask. There is an increasing unease about phone-addiction and screen time. We're all looking for a way out. Something that allows us to be digitally connected without exhausting us. Devices that are more intuitive, more immersive, aural and neural that become extensions of us so we can interact with digital spaces without choosing them over real life. All this signals to an experimentative market which is ready for something new. I can't wait to find out what replaces my screens in the near future. What about you?

Bad news for employees of this company as it plans to sack over 1000 employees, not Narayana Murthy's Infosys, TCS, Google, IBM
Bad news for employees of this company as it plans to sack over 1000 employees, not Narayana Murthy's Infosys, TCS, Google, IBM

India.com

time12 hours ago

  • India.com

Bad news for employees of this company as it plans to sack over 1000 employees, not Narayana Murthy's Infosys, TCS, Google, IBM

(Representational image: freepik) New Delhi: American multinational corporation and IT giant Microsoft Corporation will cut more than 1000 jobs as the conglomerate is rearranging its staff to support its ambitious Artificial Intelligence initiatives. This will be Microsoft's third significant layoff wave of 2025. Most of the jobs that will be eliminated in early July will be from the sales department. Microsoft's new fiscal year This particular time of early July coincides with the beginning of the company's new fiscal year, according to Bloomberg and the Times of India. As mentioned above, Microsoft is reshuffling its staff to support its ambitious Artificial Intelligence initiatives for which it is doubling down on efficiency and strategic realignment as AI investments mount up. Sales Division in third round of layoffs This third round of layoffs is considerably more focused on customer-facing positions than the earlier two rounds, which were mainly focused on engineers and developers. The most affected would be the employees in Sales and Marketing department which accounts for about 45,000 of Microsoft's 228,000 workers. In the first two rounds of layoffs, Microsoft fired around 2,300 employees in Washington this year. Earlier in 2023, the company had fired 3,200 people, which was the biggest layoffs round. Reportedly, Microsoft had dropped a hint about this move in June 2024 as it relieved 1,000 mixed-reality and Azure roles. Apart from that, the company started selling software to outside companies in April as it concentrated on small and mid-sized business sectors. Experts say that apart from the sales positions, other departments might also be impacted. In May, the company had laid off more than 6,000 people in a 3% cut of its workforce. Out of which 1,985 employees affected were from Washington. Investments in realm of Artificial Intelligence In the proverbial 'keeping up with the times' and adapting to current trends, Microsoft is now emphasising more on AI as it tries to stay ahead in a fast-changing technology landscape. The tech giant is investing heavily into data centres and AI research to support growing demand from businesses that are adopting AI tools and services. The Bloomberg report further said that Microsoft has planned capital expenditure of around Rs 6.6 lakh crore ($80 billion) for the ongoing financial year. A big chunk of this expenditure will go into expanding data centre infrastructure as the aim is to reduce pressure on existing facilities that support AI services. Layoffs in the tech sector are continuously troubling IT professionals. Recently, Amazon CEO Andy Jassy has warned that the integration of Artificial Intelligence (AI) within the corporate workforce will eventually lead to job cuts. After the COVID-19 pandemic, big tech companies like Amazon, Meta and Google laid off thousands of workers to reduce their staff. Now, another tech giant, Microsoft, has given a live, sombre, and somewhat gloomy presentation.

DNPA calls for protection of copyright in AI model training on news content
DNPA calls for protection of copyright in AI model training on news content

The Hindu

time13 hours ago

  • The Hindu

DNPA calls for protection of copyright in AI model training on news content

The Digital News Publishers Association (DNPA), an industry body of traditional media organisations with a major print presence, called on Saturday (June 21, 2025) for the protection of copyright in training of Artificial Intelligence models. The statement comes as DNPA and other organisations contribute to a review of the 'intersection' between AI and copyright being undertaken by the Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade under the Ministry of Commerce. The review is being undertaken by a committee on AI and copyright constituted by the DPIIT in April, and two meetings took place on Thursday and Friday. The committee is headed by DPIIT Secretary Himani Pande. 'DNPA firmly believes that utilising the content of digital news publishers, without consent, for AI training and subsequent generative AI applications, such as search assistance and information purposes, constitutes an infringement of copyright,' the industry group said in a statement. The Hindu is a DNPA member. 'Fair compensation' 'The association advocates for a regime that ensures fair compensation for content producers, recognising their rights in the digital landscape. Any initiative of the Government of India to ensure fair play in this regard is vital for the growth of the digital news media sector in the country.' In January, DNPA intervened in a copyright lawsuit being filed by the newswire agency Asian News International (ANI) in the Delhi High Court, arguing the ChatGPT maker OpenAI's training of its models on publicly available news content 'threatens the intellectual property rights of publishers'. An OpenAI spokesperson defended the company's training of models like ChatGPT, saying its use of public content was 'supported by long-standing and widely accepted legal precedents'.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store