Mr. Iyer didn't flinch. He brought in a generator, a secondhand laptop, and a single bulb. For three days, he and the headmaster scanned every notebook by hand—yellowed pages of arithmetic problems, faded poems copied from old newspapers, intricate diagrams of flowers and frogs. They saved each page as a PDF, then printed copies using a small Avision laser printer.
In 1992, when India was just opening its markets, Mr. Iyer traveled to a small village called Palaveram. He carried a bulky Avision scanner—the first model they had ever built. The village school had no library, no textbooks beyond a few torn copies. But it had one dusty, unlabeled cupboard filled with handwritten notebooks from teachers across decades.
The headmaster, a frail man in a white dhoti, laughed when Mr. Iyer showed him the scanner. "We have no computers, sir. No electricity for half the day." avision
Decades later, Avision became known globally for its document scanners and imaging solutions. But in Palaveram, now a town with a digital library, the elders still call any act of careful preservation "doing an Avision."
That night, Mr. Iyer wrote in his diary: "We don't sell machines. We sell vision. The ability to see what is fading and make it last." For three days, he and the headmaster scanned
Avision was never just a company that made printers and scanners. To its founder, old Mr. Iyer, it was a promise.
The company grew, but its quiet soul remained: to capture the invisible, to hold the fragile, and to hand it forward—clearly, faithfully, one page at a time. Iyer traveled to a small village called Palaveram
On the fourth day, the children arrived to find 30 brand-new booklets, each bound with twine and string. Their own curriculum. Their own history. Scanned, preserved, and reborn.