BENGALURU: At the Le Meridien hotel in Bengaluru last June, Sharad Sharma, co-founder of software products think tank iSPIRT, and a small team of volunteers quickly ran through a presentation for BJP leader Ravi Shankar Prasad , who had just taken charge as minister for information technology.Later that day, at an interaction with some members of the startup, the technology community and journalists, Prasad uttered the words “Open APIs” for the first time.Although Prasad, a lawyer-turned-politician, confessed that he didn’t quite understand what it meant, he promised to do “whatever it takes” to get government systems to work better. RS Sharma, the bureaucrat who was appointed as the secretary for Information Technology, nodded knowingly by the minister’s side.Earlier this month, the government released its Open API policy, which will make technology systems built by the government a lot better. API refers to Application Programing Interfaces, or tools that assist developers in writing code that interfaces with other software.The policy and other measures that the Indian government has recently taken to endorse free and open source systems is the effect of some of India’s top technologists now wanting to build “country-scale” systems. With their help, the government has taken up ambitious projects such as digitisation of records, payment systems that work across platforms, a goods & services tax network and digital lockers for citizens.“There is a huge amount of voluntary spirit out there and there is no harm in using that,” said Sharma. “These people are highly successful in the technology field. They are brilliant architects and bring fresh, different thinking to us.”One of them is Lalitesh Katragadda, who was Country Manager (Products) for Google in India. Katragadda has worked on the open API policy. He is also helping the Andhra Pradesh government’s billion dollar fibre optic rollout, which will give millions of users access to high-speed Internet.Amit Ranjan, who co-founded and sold SlideShare to LinkedIn for $119 million, now works for the Indian government’s department of information technology for a token salary. His job is to find smart ways of digitising millions of records and give Indian users digital lockers.“When you make an exit and you are financially better off, you can use that money as a buffer to take more risks with your career instead of going around in a red Ferrari,” said Ranjan. “The government is being very true and real when it says it needs specialised skills.”Katragadda and Ranjan are not alone. More such technologists, experienced in building and scaling systems used by millions of users, have begun working closely with the government, influencing policy decisions on technology and helping the government build systems like a Google or Facebook would.Pramod Varma, chief architect of the Unique Identification Authority of India, is one of the key people working on multiple projects with the government. Varma, an ardent supporter of open and scalable systems, is playing a critical role in helping the goods & service tax network prepare its complex technology backbone. He is also working with the National Payments Corporation of India, an umbrella body supported by the country’s largest banks, to build a next-generation payment platform.Anand Deshpande, founder & CEO of Persistent Systems; Gian Franco, formerly of SAP; Jay Pullur, founder & CEO of Pramati Systems; former Googler Sanjay Jain, and Vijay Vujjini, chief technical architect at HCL Infotech for the UIDAI programme, are among the others who are volunteers at iSPIRT -- the Indian Software Product Industry Round Table.“This approach is critical for building next-generation digital infrastructure,” said technocrat Nandan Nilekani, who used a similar strategy of bringing in people from outside the government to work on Aadhaar, the project which aspires to give over a billion Indians a unique identification number.Most of these volunteers are being brought together by iSPIRT. “Now with iSPIRT there is an institutional way to take this (volunteering) forward,” said Nilekani.The idea is to have volunteers who put the country first and have no conflicting interests, said Sharma. “You need large-scale tech guys to do country-scale technology problems,” he said.