The city has so far reported four positive coronavirus cases.
With
the coronavirus reaching tech parks, campuses of multinational
companies and even schools and colleges in Bengaluru, the IT city is
gearing up to shoot the trouble with the help of technology. The city
has so far reported four positive coronavirus
cases.
As
more employees opt for work from home in this time of crisis,
start-ups are launching a suite of products to support collaboration
and communication among workers. Ozonetel, a city-based start-up, for
example, has rolled out a cloud-based solution for call centre
companies to switch to work-from-home, in order to contain the spread
of the virus. Using the solution, a company can route calls to mobile
phones or even landlines, instead of them taking calls via desktop.
Human
resource management software start-up Kredily has started providing
its attendance management app for free to companies. Unlike a
contact-based biometric system, the web-based authentication system
rules out the possibility of spreading the virus through human
contact, said the company.
“This
restricts attendance to a specific location and comes in handy for
companies where work-from-home is not being practised,” said
Devendra Khandegar, founder & CEO of the start-up.
Chennai-based
company Zoho which has clients such as Ola, MedLife and OnePlus in
Bengaluru,
has decided to offer its newly-launched remote work toolkit
‘Remotely’ for free to everyone. Remotely includes 10
applications that create a comprehensive communication system
including virtual meetings, showtime for conferences, and online file
management. “Our CEO (Sridhar Vembu) has been working from a remote
farm in Tenkasi, a village in Tamil Nadu, and encouraging employees
to go back to their home towns if they have internet connectivity,”
said the company.
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