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Communication, Digital India & Exercises

🎓 Class 12 Social Science CBSE Theory Chapter 7 — Transport and Communication (India) ⏱ ~28 min
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Communication Networks & NCERT Exercises — India Post, Telephony, Internet, Doordarshan, AIR & Satellite Systems

NCERT India: People and Economy — Unit IV, Chapter 7 (Part 3 — Final)

7.5 Communication Networks

Human beings have evolved many methods of communication? over time. In earlier times, messages were delivered by beating drums or hollow tree trunks, by smoke or fire signals, or by fast-running messengers. Horses, camels, dogs and birds — even fish-skin maps — were used to send messages. In those early days, the means of communication and the means of transportation were one and the same: a horse carried both the rider and his letter.

The picture changed dramatically with the invention of the post-office, the telegraph, the printing press, the telephone and the satellite. Each new technology compressed the time and the space between sender and receiver. Today, with smartphones, fibre-optic cable and 5G networks, a message in Mumbai reaches Manipur in milliseconds — and the great revolution that science and technology brought to communication continues to accelerate.

On the basis of scale and quality of audience reached, communication is divided into two broad categories — personal communication (one-to-one) and mass communication (one-to-many).

Fig 7.7 — Modes of Communication in India

COMMUNICATION PERSONAL Post / Letter Telephone Internet MASS Radio (AIR) TV / DD Print / Satellite Adapted from NCERT Ch.7 — the boundary blurs once a phone or internet feed reaches mass audiences.

Personal Communication — The Post, the Phone & the Internet

Among personal communication systems, the internet is today the most effective and advanced medium. It is widely used in urban areas. The internet enables a user to establish direct contact through e-mail, to browse the world’s knowledge stores, to do e-commerce and to carry out money transactions. The internet is, in NCERT’s words, “like a huge central warehouse of data” — an efficient access to information at a comparatively low cost. It also enables the basic facility of direct, real-time communication.

India Post — The Largest Postal Network in the World

India Post — A Network of 1.55 Lakh Post Offices
The Indian postal system is the largest postal network in the world, with over 1.55 lakh post offices spread across the country. Around 89% of the post offices are in rural areas, making them the deepest reaching public-service infrastructure in India. India Post handles ordinary mail, registered post, parcels, money orders, the popular Post Office Savings Account, and now the India Post Payments Bank.

Telecommunications — From STD to 5G

The telecommunications revolution has been the great Indian story of the past three decades. BSNL (Bharat Sanchar Nigam Limited) and MTNL are the public-sector incumbents; private operators arrived after liberalisation in 1991. The single biggest disruption came in 2016 when Reliance Jio? launched a pan-India 4G network with free voice and ultra-cheap data. Within two years, mobile data prices fell more than 90%, and India became one of the cheapest data markets in the world.

1.55 lakh
Post offices in India
~1.2 bn
Telephone subscribers
~700 mn
Internet users (2024)
90%+
Mobile penetration

5G — The Next Wave (Launched 2022)

5G services were launched in India on 1 October 2022. By the end of 2023, 5G had been rolled out to every state and Union Territory. With peak speeds of 1 Gbps+, 5G is enabling industrial automation, telemedicine, distance education, autonomous vehicles and smart-city applications — the next wave of Digital India.

Chart 1 — Internet Users in India, 2010 to 2024 (Million)

From under 100 million in 2010 to roughly 700 million in 2024 — an order-of-magnitude jump driven by cheap smartphones and 4G after Jio (2016). Indicative trend; figures rounded.

Chart 2 — Reliance Jio 4G Subscriber Growth (Million)

Jio launched commercial 4G in September 2016. Within 6 months it had crossed 100 million subscribers — the fastest scaling of any telecom service ever recorded. Indicative figures.
Explore — The Jio disruption (2016)

Reliance Jio launched in 2016 with free voice and almost-free data. List four ways in which this changed ordinary Indian life over the next five years.

Hint:

  • Cheap data made video streaming mainstream — YouTube, Hotstar, Jio TV reached crore-plus users in tier-2 and tier-3 cities.
  • UPI took off because mobile-data was no longer expensive — cashless payments penetrated even tea-stalls.
  • Rural farmers began using WhatsApp groups for mandi prices and weather forecasts.
  • Online learning became viable, paving the way for the rapid pivot during the COVID-19 lockdowns of 2020-21.

Mass Communication — Radio, Television & Print

Radio

Radio broadcasting started in India in 1923 by the Radio Club of Bombay. Within a few years, it had earned immense popularity and changed the socio-cultural life of the people — finding a place in nearly every household. The Government brought this powerful medium under its control in 1930 as the Indian Broadcasting System; it was reorganised as All India Radio (AIR) in 1936 and renamed Akashvani in 1957.

Today, AIR broadcasts a wide variety of programmes related to information, education and entertainment. Special news bulletins are also broadcast at specific occasions like the sessions of Parliament and State Legislatures. AIR operates over 232 stations in 23 languages and 179 dialects.

Television (TV)

Television broadcasting has emerged as the most effective audio-visual medium for spreading information and educating the masses. The TV service began in India in 1959 — initially limited only to the National Capital. After 1972, several other TV centres became operational. In 1976, TV was delinked from AIR and got a separate identity as Doordarshan (DD). After INSAT-1A became operational, the National Television channel (DD-1) and the Common National Programmes (CNP) began — extending TV services to the backward and remote rural areas.

The first private satellite channels arrived in the early 1990s. DTH (Direct-to-Home) services started in 2003. Cable, DTH and OTT streaming have together transformed the TV landscape — today there are over 900 satellite TV channels in India in 26 languages.

Print Media

India boasts the largest newspaper market in the world by language diversity — newspapers are published in over 100 languages and dialects. The biggest dailies (Dainik Jagran, Hindustan, The Times of India, Eenadu, Daily Thanthi, Malayala Manorama) each have circulations running into millions of copies. Despite the rise of digital news, print circulation has remained robust because of the very large vernacular reading public.

Satellite Communication — INSAT & IRS

Satellites are themselves a mode of communication and they also regulate other modes (telephony, TV, navigation, weather forecast). Continuous and synoptic views of large areas have made satellite communication vital to India for both economic and strategic reasons. Satellite imagery is used for weather forecasting, monitoring natural calamities, surveillance of border areas and management of natural resources.

Indian satellite systems fall into two families:

📡
INSAT (1983)
The Indian National Satellite System, established in 1983, is a multi-purpose satellite system for telecommunication, meteorological observation and a host of other data and broadcast applications.
🌍
IRS (1988)
The Indian Remote Sensing satellite system became operational with the launch of IRS-1A in March 1988 from Vaikanour, Russia. Later, India developed her own Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV). NRSC at Hyderabad provides facilities for data acquisition and processing.

Digital India — The 2015 Mission

Digital India (2015)
Launched on 1 July 2015, Digital India? is a flagship programme to transform India into a digitally empowered society and a knowledge economy. Its three pillars are: (i) Digital Infrastructure — broadband to every village (BharatNet); (ii) Governance & Services on Demand — e-governance through DigiLocker, UMANG, e-Hospital, Aadhaar-linked DBT; (iii) Digital Empowerment of Citizens — universal digital literacy.

Chart 3 — Indicative Number of Post Offices in Selected States (Thousand)

Uttar Pradesh and Maharashtra dominate the post-office count. The figure of 1.55 lakh post offices for India as a whole reflects the unmatched depth of this network. Indicative figures.

7.6 A Brief Note on International Trade

Although Chapter 8 deals with international trade in detail, it is useful to note here that oceanic routes handle 95% of foreign trade by volume and 70% by value; air-cargo handles a small share by volume but a high share by value (gems, electronics, pharma). Pipelines carry imported crude inland from coastal terminals like Salaya, Mundra and Vadinar to refineries at Mathura and Panipat. Communication networks — underwater fibre cables and satellite links — ride alongside, carrying the data and the financial messaging that make trade possible.

Conclusion — Veins, Arteries & Nerves

Roads and railways move people and goods; waterways move bulk cargo; pipelines move liquids and gases; airways move speed-sensitive cargo; and communication networks move ideas, money and decisions. Together, these five systems are the veins, arteries and nerves of modern India. The economy that grew at 3% per year before 1991 now routinely grows at 7%+ — and the silent enabler of that turnaround has been a continually upgraded transport-and-communication network.

Discuss — Has Digital India bridged the digital divide?

Digital India was launched in 2015 with three pillars: digital infrastructure, governance on demand, and digital empowerment of citizens. Has it succeeded? Make two arguments for and two against.

For: (i) BharatNet has wired over 2 lakh village panchayats with optical fibre. (ii) Direct Benefit Transfer routed via Aadhaar-Jan Dhan-Mobile (JAM) trinity has cut welfare leakage by an estimated 1% of GDP per year. Against: (i) Rural internet penetration still trails urban by ~25 percentage points. (ii) Linguistic and gender divides remain pronounced; women internet users are still 12-15% behind men in many states.

Think About It — Why was Tv first delinked from AIR?

Television began as part of All India Radio in 1959 but was given a separate identity as Doordarshan in 1976. Why was this institutional separation necessary?

Answer guide: Radio and TV had become technically and editorially distinct: TV needed video studios, transmission towers with line-of-sight microwave links, and a different content design. The audience was also growing fast after the 1972 expansion. By giving DD a separate identity in 1976, the Government allowed each medium to specialise — AIR in audio reach (especially rural) and DD in audio-visual mass impact. INSAT-1A (1983) further enabled DD to broadcast a Common National Programme nation-wide.

Competency-Based Questions — Communication Networks

Case Study: India has the world’s largest postal network with 1.55 lakh post offices, ~1.2 billion telephone subscribers and ~700 million internet users (2024). Reliance Jio launched 4G in 2016 and disrupted the data market; 5G services were rolled out from 1 October 2022. Doordarshan (1959), All India Radio (1936) and Akashvani (1957) remain key public broadcasters. INSAT (1983) and IRS (1988) anchor India’s satellite system. Digital India was launched in 2015.
1. The first radio programme in India was broadcast in —
L1 Remember
  • (a) 1911
  • (b) 1936
  • (c) 1923
  • (d) 1927
Answer: (c) 1923. The Radio Club of Bombay began broadcasting in 1923; All India Radio took its present name in 1936; Akashvani was adopted in 1957.
2. Why has the Indian postal network — despite e-mail and WhatsApp — not been replaced?
L4 Analyse
Answer: Three reasons. First, the postal network reaches every village — nearly 90% of post offices are in rural areas, where bandwidth and digital literacy are still uneven. Second, India Post has reinvented itself as a logistics player — speed-post and parcel delivery for e-commerce now form a sizeable share of revenue. Third, the post office hosts financial services (POSB, India Post Payments Bank, postal life insurance) that bring under-served rural Indians into the formal economy. So even with messaging apps, the post office’s physical reach remains unmatched.
3. Compare the role of INSAT (1983) and IRS (1988) in India’s satellite communication system.
L5 Evaluate
Answer: INSAT (Indian National Satellite System, 1983) is a communications + meteorology system — it carries DD broadcasts, AIR feeds, telephony, weather imagery, cyclone warnings and DTH services. IRS (Indian Remote Sensing, started March 1988 with IRS-1A from Vaikanour) is purely an earth-observation system — it captures multi-spectral imagery for forestry, agriculture, urban planning, mineral exploration and disaster management. INSAT looks down at signals; IRS looks down at the land. The National Remote Sensing Centre at Hyderabad processes IRS data; the Master Control Facility at Hassan controls the INSAT family.
4. Imagine you are designing a Digital India 2.0 policy for 2030. List three high-impact priorities and justify each.
L6 Create
Model answer: (i) Free public Wi-Fi at every village panchayat — 2 lakh nodes already wired by BharatNet but utilisation is low; turning fibre into Wi-Fi multiplies access at near-zero cost. (ii) Vernacular AI assistants for government services — speak-to-government in 22 scheduled languages so that the digitally less literate can access entitlements without an intermediary. (iii) Open public-data layers for every state — from mandi prices to school report cards; transparent data fuels innovation and reduces corruption. Each priority builds on assets India has already created — fibre, Aadhaar, UPI, IndiaStack — instead of starting from scratch.
HOT — A critic argues that Reliance Jio’s entry made Indian telecom a duopoly and reduced competition. Argue for or against.
L5 Evaluate
Answer: Mixed verdict. Pro-critic: Pre-Jio, India had eight operators; today the private market is dominated by Jio and Airtel with Vi gasping and BSNL playing catch-up. Concentration does reduce strategic options for consumers if the two leaders coordinate prices. Counter: tariffs are still amongst the lowest globally (less than ₹9 per GB), data consumption per user has soared past 20 GB per month, and 4G coverage now reaches 95%+ of villages. The structure has changed but the welfare outcome — cheap, ubiquitous data — is unprecedented. Therefore, while market structure should be monitored by TRAI to prevent collusion, the consumer-welfare verdict on Jio’s disruption remains net-positive.
Assertion & Reason — Communication Networks
Assertion (A): The Indian postal network is the largest in the world.
Reason (R): India has 1.55 lakh post offices, of which about 89% are in rural areas, giving it deeper coverage than any other country’s postal system.
(A) Both A and R are true and R is the correct explanation of A.
(B) Both A and R are true but R is NOT the correct explanation of A.
(C) A is true but R is false.
(D) A is false but R is true.
Correct: (A) — The 1.55 lakh figure with 89% in rural areas is precisely why the network is judged the world’s largest in physical reach. R explains A.
Assertion (A): Indian Remote Sensing (IRS) satellites are valuable for management of natural resources.
Reason (R): IRS satellites collect multi-spectral imagery that can monitor forests, crops, water bodies and urban growth from space.
(A) Both A and R are true and R is the correct explanation of A.
(B) Both A and R are true but R is NOT the correct explanation of A.
(C) A is true but R is false.
(D) A is false but R is true.
Correct: (A) — The multi-spectral imaging capability is precisely the reason IRS data are useful for forest, crop and urban-planning applications. The National Remote Sensing Centre at Hyderabad processes this data.
Assertion (A): Doordarshan was given a separate identity in 1976.
Reason (R): All India Radio was renamed Akashvani in 1957.
(A) Both A and R are true and R is the correct explanation of A.
(B) Both A and R are true but R is NOT the correct explanation of A.
(C) A is true but R is false.
(D) A is false but R is true.
Correct: (B) — Both statements are factually correct, but the AIR-to-Akashvani rename of 1957 is unrelated to TV being delinked from AIR in 1976. R does not explain A.

NCERT Exercises — Chapter 7 Solutions

1. Choose the right answer from the given options.

(i) In how many zones has the Indian Railways system been divided?
(a) 9    (b) 12    (c) 17    (d) 14
Answer: (c) 17. Indian Railways was reorganised into 17 zones (Metro Railway Kolkata is the 17th). Each zone is headed by a General Manager. The recently-added Kolkata Metro is the 17th zone.
(ii) On which river and between which two places does the National Water Way No. 1 lie?
(a) The Brahmaputra, Sadiya–Dhubri   (b) The Ganga, Haldia–Prayagraj   (c) West Coast Canal, Kottapuram to Kollam   (d) Godavari–Kakinada Puducherry
Answer: (b) The Ganga, Haldia–Prayagraj. NW-1 is 1,620 km long along the Ganga–Bhagirathi–Hooghly river system, divided into Haldia–Farakka (560 km), Farakka–Patna (460 km) and Patna–Prayagraj (600 km).
(iii) In which of the following year, the first radio programme was broadcast?
(a) 1911    (b) 1936    (c) 1927    (d) 1923
Answer: (d) 1923. Radio broadcasting started in India in 1923 by the Radio Club of Bombay. It was brought under government control in 1930, renamed All India Radio in 1936 and renamed Akashvani in 1957.

2. Answer the following questions in about 30 words.

(i) Which activity does transportation convey? Name three major modes of transportation.
Answer: Transportation conveys the activity of moving goods, commodities and people from sites of production to sites of consumption. The three major modes are: (i) land transport — roads, railways and pipelines; (ii) water transport — inland waterways and oceanic routes; (iii) air transport — the fastest mode for long distances.
(ii) Discuss advantages and disadvantages of pipeline transportation.
Answer: Advantages — (i) most efficient for liquids and gases over long distances; (ii) very low operating cost per tonne-km; (iii) weather-proof and uninterrupted; (iv) low pollution and minimal road congestion. Disadvantages — (i) very high capital cost; (ii) once laid, the route is rigid; (iii) leakage and sabotage risks; (iv) cannot serve last-mile rural pumps and not suitable for solids except as slurry.
(iii) What do you mean by ‘communication’?
Answer: Communication is the process of exchanging ideas, views, news and messages between individuals or places. It uses dedicated networks — postal, telephone, radio, television, satellite and internet. Modes are classified as personal (post, phone, e-mail) and mass (radio, TV, print). Modern communication has been revolutionised by the internet, mobile telephony and satellites.

3. Answer the following questions in about 150 words.

(i) Which are the chief means of transportation in India? Discuss the factors affecting their development.
Answer (model, ~150 words): India uses five chief means of transportation. Roads — second-largest network in the world (62.16 lakh km), carrying 85% of passenger and 70% of freight traffic; classified into NH, SH, district and rural roads. Railways — one of the longest networks (~70,000 km in 17 zones), the backbone for long-distance bulk movement, started on 16 April 1853. Inland waterways — 14,500 km of navigable rivers and canals; five National Waterways. Oceanic routes — 12 Major and 200+ minor ports along a 7,517-km coastline carrying 95% of foreign trade by volume. Air transport — began 1911; Air Authority of India runs 137+ airports; UDAN (2017) drives regional connectivity.

Factors affecting development: (i) physiography — mountains and forests slow road/rail building; plains favour density; (ii) population & economy — high-density industrial corridors attract more infrastructure; (iii) finance & technology — PPP, Bharatmala, DFC, Vande Bharat and 5G; (iv) government policy — NHAI, IWAI, AAI; (v) strategic considerations — BRO border roads, defence airfields.
(ii) Give a detailed account of the development of railways in India and highlight their importance.
Answer (model, ~150 words): Indian Railways began on 16 April 1853, when the first line ran between Bombay and Thane (34 km). Under British rule, the network expanded primarily to exploit raw materials — cotton from Maharashtra, coal from Jharkhand, jute from Bengal — and to move troops. After Independence, routes were extended to backward and remote areas. The most striking later achievement was the Konkan Railway (1998), a 760-km engineering marvel crossing 146 rivers, ~2,000 bridges and 91 tunnels.

Today the network is the world’s 4th largest at about 70,000 km, divided into 17 zones. Three gauges — broad, metre and narrow — are being unified to broad gauge under Project Unigauge. Steam has been replaced by diesel and electric traction; metro rail and CNG buses are revolutionising urban mobility.

Importance: connects diverse regions and cultures; cheapest mode for bulk freight; backbone of national integration; supports industries (steel, coal, cement); provides mass employment; the new Vande Bharat (2019) and Dedicated Freight Corridors mark the next phase.
(iii) Describe the role of roads in the economic development of India.
Answer (model, ~150 words): India has the second-largest road network in the world — about 62.16 lakh km. Roads carry 85% of passenger traffic and 70% of freight, the bulk of door-to-door movement. The classification covers National Highways (1.36 lakh km, 2% of length but 40% of traffic), State Highways (1.77 lakh km), District Roads and Rural Roads (over 80% of total length).

Economic role: (i) Connect production with markets — trucks ferry farm produce, mineral ore and finished goods to mandis, ports and cities; (ii) Promote rural development — PMGSY rural roads bring health, education and credit to villages; (iii) Support industry — the Golden Quadrilateral and Bharatmala Pariyojana decongest freight corridors; (iv) Defence & integration — BRO border roads strengthen national security and bring remote frontier areas into the mainstream economy; (v) Tourism & employment — highways enable interstate tourism and create millions of allied jobs.

Project Work

Find out the facilities that Indian Railways provide to the passengers.
Suggested project outline:
  1. Reservation & ticketing: IRCTC online booking, Tatkal, Premium Tatkal, Senior-Citizen quota, Ladies/Lower-Berth quota, e-tickets via UTS app, foreign-tourist quota, defence quota.
  2. Coach classes: AC First, AC 2-Tier, AC 3-Tier, Sleeper, Chair Car (CC), Executive (EC), General (GS), Vande Bharat seats, Tejas LHB coaches.
  3. Catering: e-Catering via IRCTC; Jan Aahar; pantry car; vegetarian / non-veg / Jain meal options; on-board pre-ordered local food.
  4. Comfort: linen, charging points, reading lights, cushioned berths, restroom (Indian/Western, bio-toilets), Wi-Fi at major stations.
  5. Safety & assistance: RPF/GRP for security; CCTV; women-only coaches; emergency chain-pull; Help Number 139; Yatri Sahayata desk; insurance of ₹10 lakh accidental cover for confirmed e-tickets.
  6. Specially-abled: wheelchairs, ramps, disabled-friendly toilets, escort assistance through Divyangjan helpdesk.
  7. Concessions: students, freedom fighters, sports persons, Padma awardees, defence personnel.
  8. Special trains: Vande Bharat, Tejas, Rajdhani, Shatabdi, Duronto; Bharat Gaurav tourist trains; Maharajas’ Express; UTS season tickets; Toy Trains (Darjeeling, Nilgiri, Kalka-Shimla).
Submit a 4-page report with photos, ticket samples and a comparative table of class-wise fares.

Map Work (Suggested)

On an outline political map of India, mark and label: (a) NH-44 (Srinagar to Kanyakumari); (b) the four metros of the Golden Quadrilateral; (c) the five National Waterways NW-1 to NW-5; (d) the 12 Major Ports; (e) IGI Delhi airport; (f) Hazira and Jagdishpur (terminals of HBJ pipeline).
Marking guide:
  • NH-44 — from Srinagar (J&K) southward through Jalandhar, Delhi, Agra, Gwalior, Nagpur, Hyderabad, Bengaluru, Madurai to Kanyakumari (3,745 km).
  • GQ metros — Delhi (north), Mumbai (west), Chennai (south-east), Kolkata (east).
  • NW-1 Prayagraj–Haldia; NW-2 Sadiya–Dhubri (Brahmaputra); NW-3 Kottapuram–Kollam (Kerala backwaters); NW-4 Krishna–Godavari with Kakinada–Puducherry canals; NW-5 Mahanadi–Brahmani delta + East Coast Canal.
  • Major Ports — West coast: Kandla, Mumbai, JNPT, Mormugao, New Mangalore, Kochi. East coast: Tuticorin, Chennai, Ennore, Visakhapatnam, Paradip, Haldia (Kolkata is riverine).
  • IGI Delhi — mark south of Delhi city.
  • HBJ pipeline — Hazira (Gujarat coast, near Surat) → Vijaipur (MP) → Jagdishpur (UP).

Chapter 7 — Summary at a Glance

  • Transport moves goods and people; communication moves ideas and messages. Together they enable the modern economy.
  • Roads — 62.16 lakh km (2nd largest in world); 85% of passenger and 70% of freight; classified into NH (1.36 lakh km, 2% length, 40% traffic), SH, District, Rural. NHAI (1995) builds Golden Quadrilateral (5,846 km) and Bharatmala (2017).
  • BRO (1960) builds strategic border roads; built the Atal Tunnel (9.02 km) at 3,000 m altitude.
  • Indian Railways — began 16 April 1853 (Bombay–Thane, 34 km); 17 zones; three gauges (broad 1.676 m, metre 1 m, narrow 0.762/0.610 m) being unified to Broad Gauge under Project Unigauge; modern: Vande Bharat (2019), Konkan Railway (1998), DFCs, Mumbai-Ahmedabad bullet train.
  • Inland Waterways — IWAI (1986); 14,500 km navigable; five NWs: NW-1 Ganga 1,620 km, NW-2 Brahmaputra 891 km, NW-3 West Coast Canal 205 km, NW-4 Krishna–Godavari 1,078 km, NW-5 Mahanadi–Brahmani 588 km. National Waterways Act 2016 declared 111 NWs.
  • Oceanic routes — 7,517 km coastline; 12 Major + 200 minor ports; 95% foreign trade by volume.
  • Air transport — began 1911 (Allahabad-Naini, 10 km); AAI runs airspace; UDAN (2017) regional connectivity; Pawan Hans helicopter services.
  • Pipelines — OIL (1959) built Naharkatiya–Barauni (Asia’s first cross-country, 1,157 km); GAIL (1984) built HBJ pipeline (1,700 km, Hazira–Vijaipur–Jagdishpur). Grid expanding from 18,500 km to 34,000+ km.
  • Communication — 1.55 lakh post offices (largest in world); ~1.2 bn telephone subscribers; 5G launched 1 October 2022; AIR (1936, Akashvani 1957); Doordarshan (1959, separate from AIR 1976); INSAT (1983) + IRS (1988); Digital India launched 2015.

Key Terms — Quick Recap

National Highway (NH)Inter-state main road built & maintained by the Central Government.
NHAINational Highways Authority of India, set up 1988 (operational 1995).
Golden Quadrilateral5,846-km, 4/6-lane corridor connecting Delhi–Mumbai–Chennai–Kolkata.
Bharatmala Pariyojana2017 programme — ~26,000 km of Economic Corridors and ring roads.
BROBorder Roads Organisation (May 1960) — strategic border-area roads.
Project UnigaugeConversion of metre & narrow gauge lines to Broad Gauge.
Broad Gauge1.676 m distance between rails; the dominant Indian standard.
Vande BharatSemi-high-speed train (2019), indigenously designed; 160 km/h.
Dedicated Freight Corridor (DFC)Twin-track exclusive goods-train corridors (Eastern & Western).
NW-1Prayagraj-Haldia waterway, 1,620 km on Ganga-Bhagirathi-Hooghly.
NW-2Sadiya-Dhubri waterway, 891 km on Brahmaputra.
JNPTJawaharlal Nehru Port Trust (Nhava Sheva); India’s biggest container port.
Major PortOne of 12 ports administered by the Government of India.
UDANUde Desh ka Aam Nagrik (2017) — Regional Connectivity Scheme.
IGI DelhiIndira Gandhi International Airport — busiest airport in India.
HBJ PipelineHazira–Vijaipur–Jagdishpur, 1,700 km gas pipeline (GAIL).
India Post1.55 lakh post offices — world’s largest postal network.
Reliance Jio2016 entrant; disrupted telecom with cheap 4G data.
5GFifth-generation mobile network; launched in India 1 October 2022.
DoordarshanPublic-service broadcaster; TV began 1959; separate identity 1976.
AIR / AkashvaniAll India Radio (renamed 1936); became Akashvani in 1957.
Digital IndiaFlagship scheme, launched 1 July 2015 — broadband, e-governance, e-empowerment.

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