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It’s a wrap: News this week (March 16–20)

It’s a wrap: News this week (March 16–20)

India’s enterprise-tech week was a sharp reminder that AI is no longer a “use-case hunt,” it’s an infrastructure-and-execution race. Between March 16 and March 20, the biggest stories clustered around three themes: new GPU capacity landing in-country, agent platforms getting productised for deployment, and industry partnerships that hardwire AI into real operations, from airline servicing to industrial automation. 

Yotta and Gorilla scale up India’s AI compute with 5,000+ GPUs

The week’s loudest infrastructure signal came from Yotta’s partnership with Gorilla Technology to deploy 5,000+ GPUs for AI workloads in India. Gorilla plans to install about 640 high-performance servers based on NVIDIA HGX B200 architecture at Yotta’s Tier IV NM1 data centre in Navi Mumbai, positioning the rollout as hyperscale AI capacity for enterprise and government use. Gorilla also outlined a large commercial ambition for the engagement over the coming years, underscoring how fast the “AI infrastructure” line item is swelling. 

Hexaware’s Agentverse: 600 ready-to-deploy agents, packaged for the enterprise

On the software side, Hexaware launched Agentverse, an enterprise AI agent platform with 600+ pre-built agents, a clear sign that services firms are trying to standardise and “ship” agentic AI the way they once did with automation and cloud accelerators. The message is speed: reduce time-to-value by offering reusable agents that can be adapted across functions and client environments instead of being built from scratch every time. 

Wipro and Harness move AI into the software factory

While agents grab attention, the week also highlighted a quieter bottleneck: shipping software safely and repeatedly as AI-driven change accelerates. Wipro and Harness announced a collaboration focused on AI-native software delivery, combining Wipro’s agent-based delivery platform WEGA with the Harness AI Software Delivery Platform. The intent is to add more automation and control across build, test, and release—because as AI programs scale, delivery discipline becomes the difference between “innovation” and operational chaos. 

TCS ties up with Amadeus and ABB as AI becomes vertical, not generic

TCS used the week to underline how AI is being embedded into specific industry platforms rather than sold as a general capability. In travel tech, it partnered with Amadeus to accelerate modern airline retailing, including work on the service-centre user interface for Amadeus Nevio, positioned as a next-gen airline retailing and servicing platform. Separately, TCS signed an MoU with ABB to expand collaboration across IT infrastructure, data centres, applications, and industrial AI, pointing to the growing overlap between enterprise IT and operational technology. 

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