icdsa@scrs.in | icdsa.scrs@gmail.com | sjnanda.ece@mnit.ac.in
The after-conference proceeding of the ICDSA 2024 will be published in SCOPUS Indexed Springer Book Series, ‘Lecture Notes in Networks and Systems’

Malaviya National Institute of Technology Jaipur is one of the oldest NITs which has a rich heritage of sixty years producing world-class engineers, scientists, managers, and architects. The institute is ranked 37th in the National Institutional Ranking Framework (NIRF-2023) under the category of Engineering (Research and Teaching). The MNIT was established in 1963 with the name Malaviya Regional Engineering College, Jaipur as a joint venture of the Government of India and the Government of Rajasthan, Subsequently; on June 26, 2002, the college has been given the status of National Institute of Technology and on 15 August 2007, Proclaimed Institute of National Importance through Act of Parliament. The Institute is fully funded by the Ministry of Education (Shiksha Mantralaya), Government of India. More than 12,000 students have already graduated since its establishment. Extending into an area of over 317 acres of lush greenery, the campus of the Institute is imaginatively laid-out with a picturesque landscape. It presents a spectacle of harmony in modern architecture and natural beauty which enthralls and inspires. The vision of MNIT Jaipur is to create a center for imparting technical education of international standards and conducting research at the cutting edge of technology to meet the current and future challenges of technological development.

 

 

About Pink City Jaipur:


Jaipur is the capital and largest city of the Indian state of Rajasthan in Northern India. It was founded on 18 November 1727 by Maharaja Sawai Jai Singh II, the ruler of Amber, after whom the city is named. The city today has a population of 3.1 million. Jaipur is known as the Pink City of India.

The city is unusual among pre-modern Indian cities in the regularity of its streets and the division of the city into six sectors by broad streets 34 m (111 ft) wide. The urban quarters are further divided by networks of gridded streets. Five quarters wrap around the east, south, and west sides of a central palace quarter, with a sixth quarter immediately to the east. The Palace quarter encloses the Hawa Mahal palace complex, formal gardens, and a small lake. Nahargarh Fort, which was the residence of the King Sawai Jai Singh II, crowns the hill in the northwest corner of the old city. The observatory, Jantar Mantar, is one of the World Heritage Sites. Included on the Golden Triangle tourist circuit, along with Delhi and Agra, Jaipur is an extremely popular tourist destination in Rajasthan and India. Read more...