Propel your organization into the future with IoT and AI.
MapIT.ai is building Makerspace Management Solution for effective management and utilization of makerspaces across 11 colleges in India including 3 institutes of emminence.
MapIT.ai is building AI Powered Data Analysis solution which integrates your marketing data (google marketing platform, facebook ads, linkedin ads) and sales data (online and offline) to provide insights into the effectiveness of your ad campaigns and marketing ROI.
To understand the Indian family lifestyle is to understand a beautiful, chaotic symphony of managed noise, unspoken sacrifices, and deep-rooted traditions that refuse to fade away even in the age of gig-economy apps.
The 21st-century Indian family lifestyle is a fascinating hybrid. You’ll see a grandmother using WhatsApp to send "Good Morning" blessings to her 50-member family group, or a family using an app to order organic groceries while discussing an ancient Ayurvedic remedy for a cold.
The evening chai is sacred. A small stainless steel cup of sweet, spicy tea. It is drunk in the balcony or on the steps of the house.
Dinner is late. Usually 9:00 PM or even 10:00 PM. Unlike the West, dinner is not a quick sandwich. It is a full meal: Roti, rice, dal, a dry vegetable, a curry, and yogurt.
The Indian family is rarely a nuclear unit in isolation; it is an ecosystem. Three generations share a single roof, and with it, they share everything—joys, finances, gossip, and grievances. The father leaves for work on a motorbike, weaving through sacred cows and auto-rickshaws. The mother might juggle a corporate Zoom meeting while stirring a pot of dal . Meanwhile, the grandmother teaches a granddaughter how to string marigolds for the temple, and the grandfather walks to the local market to haggle over the price of okra and ripe mangoes. This interwoven existence creates a beautiful, chaotic symphony: someone is always shouting for the Wi-Fi password, a cousin is arriving unannounced for lunch, and an aunt is calling to remind everyone about a cousin’s wedding next month.
Meanwhile, in a villa in Gujarat, the joint family is stirring. The eldest son, Raj, practices yoga on the terrace. His wife, Priya, is already on a Zoom call with a New York client (the gig economy has hit the Indian household hard). The beauty of the pre-dawn in India is the silence. It is the only time the family gets to think for themselves before the collective thinking begins.
Children in Indian families often stay with parents well into their late twenties or thirties, a concept that baffles the Western world. But in India, this is the safety net. It allows young professionals to take risks, save money, and focus on career growth without the immediate pressure of rent and bills.
To understand the Indian family lifestyle is to understand a beautiful, chaotic symphony of managed noise, unspoken sacrifices, and deep-rooted traditions that refuse to fade away even in the age of gig-economy apps.
The 21st-century Indian family lifestyle is a fascinating hybrid. You’ll see a grandmother using WhatsApp to send "Good Morning" blessings to her 50-member family group, or a family using an app to order organic groceries while discussing an ancient Ayurvedic remedy for a cold.
The evening chai is sacred. A small stainless steel cup of sweet, spicy tea. It is drunk in the balcony or on the steps of the house.
Dinner is late. Usually 9:00 PM or even 10:00 PM. Unlike the West, dinner is not a quick sandwich. It is a full meal: Roti, rice, dal, a dry vegetable, a curry, and yogurt.
The Indian family is rarely a nuclear unit in isolation; it is an ecosystem. Three generations share a single roof, and with it, they share everything—joys, finances, gossip, and grievances. The father leaves for work on a motorbike, weaving through sacred cows and auto-rickshaws. The mother might juggle a corporate Zoom meeting while stirring a pot of dal . Meanwhile, the grandmother teaches a granddaughter how to string marigolds for the temple, and the grandfather walks to the local market to haggle over the price of okra and ripe mangoes. This interwoven existence creates a beautiful, chaotic symphony: someone is always shouting for the Wi-Fi password, a cousin is arriving unannounced for lunch, and an aunt is calling to remind everyone about a cousin’s wedding next month.
Meanwhile, in a villa in Gujarat, the joint family is stirring. The eldest son, Raj, practices yoga on the terrace. His wife, Priya, is already on a Zoom call with a New York client (the gig economy has hit the Indian household hard). The beauty of the pre-dawn in India is the silence. It is the only time the family gets to think for themselves before the collective thinking begins.
Children in Indian families often stay with parents well into their late twenties or thirties, a concept that baffles the Western world. But in India, this is the safety net. It allows young professionals to take risks, save money, and focus on career growth without the immediate pressure of rent and bills.
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We’re happy to answer any questions you may have and help you determine which of our services best fit your needs.
You drop us a message. Or give us a call. The evening chai is sacred
We schedule a meeting to understand your needs Dinner is late
We propose to you solutions that could advance your business to the next step