7.0 - Baraha Software
The little girl raised her hand. “Uncle, does it have spell check?”
In 2004, his elder brother, a linguist and software hobbyist named Suresh, had bought the original Baraha CD from a stall outside Avenue Road. Suresh believed that technology should serve the mother tongue, not the other way around. On Baraha 7.0, you typed the way you thought—phonetically. You wrote “hEge” and the software breathed life into No complex keyboard mapping. No intrusive autocorrect. Just the raw, honest flow of Dravidian vowels and consonants. Baraha Software 7.0
“Can you show me?” she asked, her phone’s recorder already rolling. The little girl raised her hand
He mailed one to the girl’s home address. On Baraha 7
The software had quirks. It crashed if you typed more than 15 pages without saving. It couldn’t handle emojis or right-to-left text. And the save icon was still a floppy disk—a shape that made young people smile with pity.