India unveils mobile operating system BharOS in self-reliance pursuit
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BharOS, short for Bharat, or India, OS, does not come with any default apps and gives users access to only trusted apps.
PHOTO: REUTERS
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NEW DELHI – India unveiled a mobile operating system, developed at one of its top engineering colleges, which it claimed was more secure than Alphabet Inc’s Android and designed to be used in businesses and high-security surroundings.
BharOS, short for Bharat, or India, OS, does not come with any default apps and gives users access to only trusted apps from private store services.
“This is a Linux-based operating system,” Professor V. Kamakoti, director at the Indian Institute of Technology, Madras, said in a phone interview.
The local operating system is another step toward Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s goal of being self-reliant in everything from 5G telecommunications equipment to chip-fabrication plants. India’s poor will be key beneficiaries of such digital infrastructure, federal Education and Entrepreneurship Minister Dharmendra Pradhan said at the unveiling.
BharOS comes at a time when India has levied a $160 million fine on Google
To be sure, BharOS faces an uphill task in a market dominated by Android, which runs roughly 97 per cent of India’s 620 million smartphones. The remaining devices use Apple’s iOS. BLOOMBERG

