>>13598105>Nobody gives a crap about your entrance examThey kind of do. There are plenty of videos about JEE Advanced made by non-Indians, including professors. They might've made those videos for views, by popular demand or maybe because they are genuinely fascinated. Regardless of the reasons, they do "give a shit".
>what has india produced when it comes to actual engineering of any kind?I think this reply is going to get lengthy now. First, I am going to talk about modern contributions and then about historical contributions.
https://cs.brown.edu/people/apapouts/faculty_dataset.htmlThis is a dataset of CS professors in the top 50 US universities. Based on this list, the IITs produce the highest number of graduates per capita who go on to become CS professors in the top 50. This is true despite there being immigration hurdles. I think we can also extrapolate this for other engineering fields but I don't have the data for that so I will just leave it there.
This isn't entirely engineering but a combination of engineering and entrepreneurship but Indian immigrants founded 15% of Silicon Valley startups and 16% of (mostly tech) U.S. startups valued over a billion dollars or more despite Indians making up less than 1% of U.S.'s population.
Source:
https://www.immigrationresearch.org/report/other/immigrants-and-billion-dollar-startupsRajagopal Reddy, who won the Turing Award in 1994 is one of the major contributors to AI and is among the first people to demonstrate the commercial importance of AI.
Jagadish Chandra Bose is one of the fathers of radio science and wireless communication and made the first demonstration of microwave transmission in 1985 in Calcutta, two years before Marconi.
Narinder Singh Kapany is considered the father of fiber optics.
India is the third largest producer of (mostly tech) unicorn startups in the world, more than Japan and Germany which have a bigger economy.