Grab is define auto eroticismentering India, though not the way some of us had expected.
The Southeast Asian ride-hailing service said on Wednesday it's opening two new R&D centers, one in Bangalore, India, and the other one in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam as the company further ramps up its engineering efforts.
SEE ALSO: The mechanism behind booking a ride on your phone is actually really complexThe addition of these two centres brings its engineering offices globally to six markets; it has others in Jakarta, Beijing, Singapore, and Seattle.
Grab noted that the new facilities will result in the creation of 800 new jobs too.
The added boost of engineers from India and Vietnam will help with the company's efforts to develop local features, as it works to fend off Uber in Southeast Asia.
The new engineers will also work on the company's GrabPay cashless wallet payment platform, targeting the emerging markets it operates in.
Until now GrabPay has exclusively worked with the Grab cab service, but the company is now opening it up and is in talks with banks and other financial sectors, said Arul Kumaravel, VP of Engineering at Grab in an interview with Mashable.
"India itself is going through the transition to cash-less solution and the challenges it faces are very similar to what we have seen at other Asian markets," Kumaravel said, adding that the company will be hiring 200 engineers and developers at its R&D center in Bangalore.
Grab started seeking engineers and developers in India several weeks ago. It's is hosting a "special event" in the country on March 24, presumably to celebrate the launch.
India is a lucrative market for transportation services. Valued at $10 billion by several estimates, the country already has multiple cab services fighting for market dominance.
Kumaravel, however, insists that the company currently has "no plans" to bring its cab-service to India, or even launch GrabPay as a standalone service in the country. "But we're looking at India," he said.
Although Uber entered India five years ago, the company is still trailing behind the local giant Ola. Both the companies have thrown enticing offers to drivers in the country to lure them to their respective networks, and are increasingly looking at right-sizing their business models to boost revenue.
Meanwhile, India's largest industrial house, RIL is also looking at offering a cab service in India. According to several cab drivers, the company recently approached them for its upcoming cab service dubbed Jio Cabs.
Grab, which is valued at $3 billion, claims to have 36 million downloads and it operates as many as 1.5 million bookings every day. It currently offers its cab services in six Southeast Asian countries: Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, Vietnam and Indonesia, with over 710,000 registered drivers on its network.
UPDATE: March 15, 2017, 4:08 p.m. SGT Updated with additional information on GrabPay from Kumaravel.
Audi to use ironApple iPad Pro preorder deal: Save $50 with My Best Buy Plus or TotalNYT's The Mini crossword answers for May 8Eddie Wu continues to lead Alibaba’s Cloud division in the recent adjustment · TechNodeVivo X100 debuts with MediaTek's new Dimensity 9300 and Zeiss APO camera · TechNode8 reasons 'Evil' is the best show you're not watchingHolly is Fat Bear Week's fattest bearThe new iPad ad essentially flips AIThe stunning survival story of fat Bear 503The new iPad ad essentially flips AITSMC may build a third plant in Japan for 3nm chips · TechNodeHow to watch 'Doctor Who': Season 14 premiere date, streaming deals, and moreGreta Thunberg changes her Twitter bio to Trump quoteByteDance to exit gaming sector by closing down Nuverse · TechNodeIt's time to choose 2019's fat bear week championTemu to ship goods by sea instead of air in costByteDance to exit gaming sector by closing down Nuverse · TechNodeByteDance intends to sell its gaming arm Moonton: report · TechNodeSlutshaming on the internet: Read an extract from 'Sluts' by Beth AshleyTencent achieves “high Lilac, the Color of Fashionable Feelings Redux: The Taxman Cometh David Hockney’s Improbable Inspirations The Book Jean On Becoming an American Writer by Alexander Chee The Age of Wreckers and Exterminators Redux: Tom Wolfe, Barbara Grossman, and Gwyneth Lewis by The Paris Review The Child Thing: An Interview with Sheila Heti by Claudia Dey Selected Sentences from Mark Twain’s Life on the Mississippi by Anthony Madrid Sometimes the Pie Just Calls Your Name by Rick Bragg Tom Wolfe, 1930–2018 May ’68: A Great Lyrical Community Staff Picks: Kendrick, Cardi Covers, and Cautionary Tales Nabokov Reads “The Ballad of Longwood Glen” by The Paris Review Endless Summer Wells Flowers Not Grown Anywhere Else by The Paris Review The Book I Kept for the Cover Ten Superstitions of Writers and Artists Seeing Beyond the Tip of Your Nose A Black Artist Named White by Kerry James Marshall
1.8773s , 10196.484375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【define auto eroticism】,Unobstructed Information Network