Предсказуемо
Jan. 3rd, 2026 07:52 amslashdot.org -- Indian IT Was Supposed To Die From AI. Instead It's Billing for the Cleanup.
indiadispatch.com -- For the last two years, generative AI was going to kill Indian IT. The argument seemed almost self-evident — if machines can write code, a $250 billion industry built on getting humans to write it cheaper has nowhere left to go. Investors acted accordingly, and the sector has since underperformed the broader market by 30% or more.
The industry has spent this year pushing back. It cut margins, restructured workforces, built platforms, and told clients that AI has not transformed their enterprises because their enterprises are a 30-year accumulation of SAP, Oracle, Workday and middleware that was never designed to talk to anything. And finally, Indian IT is who you call when systems need to talk to each other.
indiadispatch.com -- For the last two years, generative AI was going to kill Indian IT. The argument seemed almost self-evident — if machines can write code, a $250 billion industry built on getting humans to write it cheaper has nowhere left to go. Investors acted accordingly, and the sector has since underperformed the broader market by 30% or more.
The industry has spent this year pushing back. It cut margins, restructured workforces, built platforms, and told clients that AI has not transformed their enterprises because their enterprises are a 30-year accumulation of SAP, Oracle, Workday and middleware that was never designed to talk to anything. And finally, Indian IT is who you call when systems need to talk to each other.

