Avision Now

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 was never just a company that made printers and scanners. To its founder, old Mr. Iyer, it was a promise. avision

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

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." No electricity for half the day

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.