Driving India’s AI self-reliance, Turiyam AI and C-DAC showcase a fully indigenous stack, validating advanced workloads on domestic servers and strengthening the nation’s computing ecosystem.
Bengaluru-based Turiyam AI has announced the successful deployment of its inference engine on indigenous server systems developed by the Centre for Development of Advanced Computing (C-DAC), pushing India’s efforts to establish a fully integrated domestic AI stack.
The deployment involved integrating Turiyam’s inference-first compute platform with C-DAC’s Rudra 1 and Rudra 2 servers.
During validation, a large language model (LLM) for Hindi, covering 37 dialects, was executed within C-DAC’s high-performance computing environment.
According to the company, the achievement demonstrates the ability to run advanced AI workloads entirely on Indian-developed software and hardware infrastructure.
The initiative highlights the potential to reduce reliance on imported systems and strengthen India’s position in advanced computing.
“The validation of advanced AI workloads on indigenous computing infrastructure reflects the growing maturity of India’s research and innovation ecosystem,” said E Magesh, Director General of C-DAC.
He added, “C-DAC is open to enabling platforms that support the development and deployment of next-generationtechnologies.”
Turiyam AI’s cofounder and CEO, Sanchayan Sinha, noted: “This milestone proves that India can build and execute across the full AI stack, from model to inference engine and advanced compute platforms.”
He emphasised that the validation shows advanced workloads can run on domestically engineered systems without compromise.
Turiyam AI specialises in high-performance AI compute solutions, focusing on the inference layer to deliver cost and energy-efficient alternatives to traditional GPU clusters. C-DAC, under the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology, continues to drive national initiatives in high-performance computing and AI.


















