In the middle of an oppressive Hyderabad summer in 2007, Venkat Rajaraman stood in the long queue at the airport, when he noticed two young men checking their newly acquired iPod with a lot of curiosity. Rajaraman asked them if they knew the chip for the product was designed in Hyderabad. It was not a question that was unintended since he worked for Nvidia, the company behind the chip design. But it was the question that a 70-year old who was overhearing their conversation that made him take a hard look at the way things were. “Is a music player a priority for a country like India?” he asked him. Narrating the story, Rajaraman says it was “a hard slap across my face and the defining moment for me to do something different.”