In 2024, the Abdul Kalam Wing's flagship initiative — Vighnana Vahini, the "Vehicle of Knowledge" — went operational at Konakanchi. The first solar-powered mobile skill lab parked outside the same panchayat school that hosted Sukheebhava in 2017.
The brief was simple: take the rural BPO model further. If a panchayat school can host a free medical camp, it can host a coding bench. If a child can recite a Telugu pledge, she can narrate a BIM tutorial. The Abdul Kalam Wing — named for Dr. APJ Abdul Kalam, who proved that India's village boys can build rockets — was created to make that real.
The Konakanchi centre runs on a hybrid model. Daytime: PMKVY-certified rural BPO training in Telugu and Hindi. Evening: AI tooling — short-form video production, BIM walk-throughs, basic 3D, image generation, and Indic-language voice-over. All output is broadcast-quality and licensed openly.
The video on this page is one Karyakarta's first solo edit. She picked the topic (BIM vs CAD), wrote the script in Telugu, recorded the narration on a phone, and assembled the timeline using a free editor on a refurbished laptop. The whole pipeline cost her zero rupees and earned her 8 BC (₹1,600) in Karyakarta credit. The video has since been used as teaching material in two engineering colleges.
This is what bNg was always going to grow into. From a Vidya Sambaralu rally in 2016 to a free medical tent in Konakanchi in 2017 to an Abu Dhabi worker camp in 2018 to a girl producing broadcast video in her own village in 2026 — same founders, same village, same conviction. Technology in the service of the rural, the poor, and the unheard.