American electrical engineer and businessman
Vanu Bose
Born Vanu Amar Bose
(1965-04-29 ) April 29, 1965Died November 11, 2017(2017-11-11) (aged 52) Education MIT Occupation(s) Electrical engineer; founder and CEO of Vanu, Inc. Relatives Amar Bose (father)
Vanu, Inc. Company type Private Founded 1998; 26 years ago (1998 ) Headquarters , U.S.
Website vanu .com
Vanu Gopal Bose (October 4, 1965 – November 11, 2017) was an American electrical engineer and the founder of Vanu Inc. He was the son of Amar Bose , the founder of Bose Corporation .[ 1]
Life and career
Bose was born in Boston, Massachusetts , in 1965 to Amar Bose and Prema Sarathy Bose. His parents later divorced.[ 2] He attended Wayland High School and graduated in 1983. He attended his father's alma mater Massachusetts Institute of Technology and graduated with a BS in Computer Science , Electrical Engineering , and Mathematics in 1988, he earned an MS in 1994, and a PhD in 1999.[ 3] He was the founder and CEO of Vanu, Inc., a firm that markets software-defined radio technology.[ 4] [ 5] [ 6] The company uses technology based on his graduate research work, called SpectrumWare, under supervisors David L. Tennenhouse and John Guttag .[ 7] [ 8] [ 9] The technology was licensed from MIT in 1999 after several rounds of negotiation.[ 10] [ 11]
In November 2004, its Anywave technology became the first use of software-defined radio certified by the US Federal Communications Commission , and ADC Telecommunications announced it would manufacture related hardware.[ 12] In 2005, work with India's Centre for Development of Telematics (C-DOT) was announced to use its technology for base transceiver stations at cell sites in rural India.[ 13] By 2008, a telecommunications provider in India was reported to be testing the technology.[ 14]
A venture capital investment of $9 million in 2007 from Charles River Ventures was followed by $32 million in 2008, from an arm of the Tata Group , Norwest Venture Partners .[ 15] A subsidiary, Vanu Coverage Company, announced $3.2 million investment in 2012.[ 16]
He took his technology to many countries and regions that otherwise would have had no access. Shortly before his death, he donated durable solar-powered cellular sites to the devastated island of Puerto Rico to assist in the location of family members following the devastation by hurricanes in 2017.[ 17]
Personal life
He married Judith L. Hill in September 2007.[ 18] They have one daughter. Bose died suddenly in Carlisle, Massachusetts on November 11, 2017, of a pulmonary embolism , aged 52.[ 2] [ 19] [ 6]
References
^ Michael Fitzgerald (September 23, 2007). "Software That Fills a Cellphone Gap" . The New York Times . Retrieved February 25, 2017 .
^ a b Silver-Greenberg, Jessica (November 14, 2017). "Vanu Bose, Who Brought Cellular Service to Remote Areas, Dies at 52" . The New York Times . Retrieved May 30, 2018 .
^ "Vanu Bose, '87, SM '94, PhD '99" . Alumni profile for EECS Connector . MIT. 2015. Retrieved February 25, 2017 .
^ Scott Woolley (November 25, 2002). "Dead Air" . Forbes . Retrieved January 13, 2013 .
^ Suchetana Ray (December 15, 2015). "My Father Couldn't Have Done In India What He Did With Bose Corp In US" . Business World . Retrieved February 25, 2017 .
^ a b "Vanu Bose, software pioneer and MIT Corporation member, dies at 52" . MIT News | Massachusetts Institute of Technology . November 12, 2017. Retrieved June 8, 2023 .
^ D.L. Tennenhouse; V.G. Bose (November 13, 1995). "SpectrumWare". Proceedings of the 1st annual international conference on Mobile computing and networking - MobiCom '95 . ACM. pp. 37– 41. doi :10.1145/215530.215551 . ISBN 0-89791-814-2 . S2CID 16079475 .
^ Vanu G. Bose (June 1999). Design and Implementation of Software Radios Using a General Purpose Processor . MIT PhD dissertation.
^ Vanu G. Bose, Alok B. Shah and Michael Ismert (March 29, 1998). "Software Radios for Wireless Networking". Infocomm '98: Seventeenth Annual Joint Conference of the IEEE Computer and Communications Societies . IEEE. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.47.9298 . ISBN 978-0-7803-4384-9 .
^ Amy Dockser Marcus (September 1999). "Bose and Arrows: MIT Seeds Inventions But Wants a Nice Cut Of Profits They Yield" . Wall Street Journal classroom edition . Retrieved February 25, 2017 .
^ Ishani Duttagupta (July 23, 2012). "NRI scientists who turned research into successful businesses" . The Economic Times . Retrieved February 25, 2017 .
^ "FCC Certifies ADC Equipment For Use With Software Defined Radio Deployments" . Wireless Design Online . January 20, 2005. Retrieved February 26, 2017 .
^ "C-DOT and Vanu Inc. enter into strategic partnership to focus on Rural Communication needs" . Press release . India Ministry of Communications and Information Technology. March 2, 2005. Retrieved February 26, 2017 .
^ Pankaj Mishra (January 27, 2008). "New technology may cut wireless network equipment cost by half" . Live Mint . Retrieved February 26, 2017 .
^ "Software Radio Maker Vanu Raises $32M From Tata, Norwest & CRV" . VC Circle on Giga Om . September 1, 2008. Retrieved February 26, 2017 .
^ Don Seiffert (May 8, 2012). "Vanu Coverage calls in $3.2M in equity" . Mass High tech . Retrieved February 25, 2017 .
^ Silver-Greenbergnov, Jessica, Vanu Bose, Who Brought Cellular Service to Remote Areas, Dies at 52 , The New York Times, November 15, 2017, page B13, New York edition
^ "Pair wed in garden" . Amherst Bee . December 12, 2007. Retrieved February 25, 2017 .
^ Dizikes, Peter (November 11, 2017). "Vanu Bose, software pioneer and MIT Corporation member, dies at 52" . MIT News . Retrieved November 12, 2017 .