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About NED:
NED University of Engineering and Technology is
the alma mater to thousands of NEDians currently
residing in North America with hundreds of them
in and around Silicon Valley, the high-tech hub
of the world. Established in 1921 as the Prince
of Wales College, it was renamed in 1942 after
a Parsee philanthropist Mr. Nadirshaw Edulji Dinshaw.
Until 1977 when it became a university in its
own right, it was affiliated with various universities
including Bombay University, Sindh University
and Karachi University in successive periods before
and after Pakistan's independence. It remains
one of the oldest and best known institutions
of higher learning in Pakistan with a large number
of very successful alumni as testament to its
rich and glorious heritage. Hundreds of these
alumni are gathering in Silicon Valley on Sept
8, 2007 to celebrate it.
NED Alumni:
Looking at the worlds of high-technology, engineering,
finance, journalism, writing, sports, music, politics
or business, you will find NEDians making their
mark. Among the sports personalities, you will
find famous names such as cricketers Saeed Anwar
and Rashid Latif , Asian games swimming medalist
Asif Kausar, national hockey player Hasan Sardar
are all NEDians. Among the published authors we
have Dr. Abul Islam with a book on chip design
and Imran Qureshi with a book on Cisco Internetworking,
Ali Hasan Cemendtaur with several books to his
credit, just to name a few. In the world of music
and entertainment, you know and love NEDians Mohammad
Ali Shehki , Ali Haider and actor Mazhar Ali who
have made their presence felt. In the world of
finance you have a recognizable NEDian Zakir Mahmood
as the CEO of Habib Bank, one of the largest banks
in Pakistan and Mohammad Aboobaker, former Intel
executive and venture capitalist in Silicon Valley.
In academia, we have Professor Ali Minai at University
of Cincinnati and Dr. Khalid Razzaqi at Illinois
State and many more. It may come as a surprise
to some of you but Arif Mansouri, the executive
editor of this newspaper, is an NEDian. Recently,
several young NEDians have made their names as
successful entrepreneurs right here in Silicon
Valley. Of particular note are Raghib Hussain
of Cavium which recently went public on NASDAQ,
Abul Islam of Open Silicon which is likely
to go public soon, Rehan Jalil of Wichorus, a
high-profile mobile WiMax start-up that just raised
its second round VC funding of $25m. These are
just a few names from a long list of very successful
NEDian businesses and executives found in the
Valley.
Other NED Alumni have had major impact in shaping
this high-tech valley through their contributions
at well known local companies such as Cisco Systems,
Intel and Sun. Whether it is Intel CPUs, VIA chipsets,
Sun Servers, Cavium Security processors, Cisco
routers, Diebold or NCR ATMs, you will find NED
Alumni fingerprints in creating these products
and systems. So many of the advances in Chipset
technology and Network Security Processors can
be attributed to VIA and VP-Net, both these companies
were co-founded by NEDians, Idris Kothari and
Saeed Kazmi. Some of the VPNet alumni started
Cavium mentioned earlier. Earlier, Saeed, Idris
and Zoaib Rangwalla served on the advisory board
of another high-flying company called Exodus.
Zoaib served as their first CFO. More recently
Idris and Saeed have a new start-up called Vertical
Systems in the area of hospitality computing.
In the field of manufacturing, there is NexLogic,
founded by Zulki Khan, an NEDian. In the field
of systems and software, away from the semiconductor
tradition of Silicon Valley and highly successful
without any venture funding, is Infonox (founded
by Dr. Safwan Shah, an NEDian). Infonox is a market
and technology leader in the delivery of complex
financial services on Kiosks, ATM's and other
point of service devices. Each of these companies
can boast of many fortune 500 customers and millions
of users. Cumulatively, these companies and products
have added economic value worth billions of dollars.
In addition to the well known start-ups and mega
successes, there are the dozens of NED Alumni
who work in the many Silicon Valley high-tech
companies that are shaping the future.
You will see many of our well-known alumni in
attendance at this convention.
Reasons to Attend:
Besides the sumptuous Pakistani food catered by
a Pakistani restaurant, nostalgic Pakistani music
by NEDians and unique comedy by British-Pakistani
comedian Shazia Mirza , the most important reason
to attend for NED alumni is to socialize and network
with other NEDians from around the world whom
you may not have a chance to meet otherwise. For
non-NEDians, it is an opportunity to get to know
successful NEDians with a view to form business
and personal relationships. The value of social
networking is not always obvious but it is beginning
to be recognized more and more with the success
of both online and face-to-face networking with
the advent of Web 2.0 and various associations
and clubs catering to specific interests. Another
reason is to hear keynotes by well-known educator
and speaker Dr. Pervez Hoodbhoy of Quaid-e-Azam
University, NEDian and mega-developer business
executive Aftab Siddiqui of Paragon Constructors
from Karachi, Pakistan and great panels with fellow
NEDians of distinction. Where else would you hear
a discussion of "NED to NASDAQ" or "NED's
Heritage" or "Life beyond Engineering"?
This is truly a unique opportunity for both NEDians
and non-NEDians.
A Word about our Sponsors:
Many of our alumni and friends have come forward
to help fund this event. These are companies either
owned or run by NEDians or in some cases generous
individual NEDians have come forward and offered
both time and money to make it a success. So far,
we have Infonox,
Jersey
Precast, Nexlogic,
K2 Ventures,
Vertical Systems,
Wichorus,
Jeewanjee Insurance,
Pakistan Link,
Koshish Foundation,
Taj Mahal Imports, Raghib Husain (Co-founder Cavium)
& Muder Kothari (Seed-Investor in Cavium)
and Badar Baqai (semiconductor veteran and former
VP at Fujitsu and LSI Logic). This list continues
to grow as we get closer to Sept 8, 2007.
The Future:
Yesterday's excellence is today's standard and
tomorrow's mediocrity. In science and technology,
the bar is being constantly raised. So, along
with the well-deserved celebration and genuine
pride in our alma mater, we will talk about the
present and the future of NED as an institution
of higher learning. As NEDians and Pakistanis,
we all have a big stake in the continued success
of this institution and we will talk about how
we can help it. Our keynote speaker Dr. Hoodbhoy
has been focusing on ways of improving science
and technology education in Pakistan. He has done
a lot of research on this subject and looked at
our neighbor India's IIT system's success. His
insights will be helpful to us in coming up with
specific, concrete ideas and plans in this pursuit
of world-class competitiveness. This convention
will help kick off a conversation that can lead
to a serious, concerted effort to improve science
and technology education for Pakistanis. In this
day and age, the future of Pakistan depends on
our success in science and technology as a nation.
The stakes here are very high. Pakistan's economic
competitiveness, its political independence, its
national security and its very survival as a civil
society in this brave new world depend on the
strength of its education system and the product
of its schools. It is a huge challenge. We need
to show that we are up to this challenge.
More Information:
Please visit www.nedians.org
for more details.
About the author:
Riaz Haq is the President of the NED Alumni Association
of Silicon Valley and Chairman of the Convention
2007 steering committee. Riaz has more than 25
years experience in the hi-tech industry. Riaz
has been on the faculties of Rutgers University
and NED Engineering University. He has co-founded
two high-tech startups, Cautella, Inc. and DynArray
Corp and managed multi-million dollar P&Ls.
Riaz is a pioneer of the PC and mobile businesses
and he has held senior management positions in
hardware and software development of Intel's microprocessor
product line from 8086 to Pentium processors.
Riaz's experience includes senior roles in marketing,
engineering and business management. Riaz was
recognized as "Person of the Year" by
PC Magazine for his outstanding contribution to
80386 program. Riaz earned a MS degree in Electrical
engineering from the New Jersey Institute of Technology.
Riaz has a blog at Haq's
musings.
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