India set to follow cheap car with US $10 laptop

what do you guys think. is it do-able.

china is selling $98 laptops in the market. but based on MIPS not intel.

------ India set to follow cheap car with UKP 7 laptop

The government-developed computer prototype will assist in bridging the 'digital divide' between rich and poor

By Rhys Blakely in Mumbai THE TIMES, UK Tuesday, February 3, 2009

Indians may soon be able to buy the ultimate in credit- crunch computing -- a laptop that costs only 500 rupees (UKP 7).

The government-developed laptop is the latest in ultra- cheap engineering to emerge from the sub-continent. It is also the most ambitious attempt yet to bring the internet to the developing world and bridge the "digital divide" between rich and poor.

India has already given the world the 100,000-rupee (UKP

1,450) Tata Nano car and a no-frills mobile telephone that costs less than 800 rupees.

The laptop that may be sold for less than the cost of a paperback book has been more than three years in the making.

It forms part of the National Mission on Education through Information and Communication Technology, India's new scheme to boost learning in rural areas through the internet.

Government officials said that a prototype of the rudimentary computer was expected within months. K. K. Pant, a government spokesman, said: "This basic computing and internet access device will be an extremely powerful learning tool in the hands of the country's youth."

The machine is the country's answer to the American One Laptop per Child project, which set out to produce a computer for $100 (UKP 68). That high-profile venture led by the scientist Nicholas Negroponte ran into problems after several companies, including the chip manufacturer Intel, refused to cooperate. As a result, the cost of Mr Negroponte's laptop will be closer to $200.

Technology experts, mindful of Mr Negroponte's experiences, have suggested that India's plans for an even cheaper machine are unrealistic. The respected website arstechnica.com said: "Can India do it? The inner-philanthropist hopes so but the realist who buys technology says 'No way'."

The technology website said that the price of computer components was too high to make a 500-rupee laptop. Analysts at the financial management company Merrill Lynch estimated that the Negroponte laptop screen alone cost about UKP 20. "India's $10 price hopes appear to be nothing more than pure fantasy," it concluded.

A government official confirmed that plans for the laptop would be outlined today but refused to give further details. Officials had put the cost of the machine previously at about 1,000 rupees but believed that the price would come down if it was mass produced. Some critics have branded the scheme a publicity stunt timed to coincide with the forthcoming general elections. Plans to cut the price to the bone appear to hinge on domestic technology that uses low levels of power.

The laptop is the result of cooperation between several of India's elite technology institutions, including the Vellore Institute of Technology, the Indian Institute of Science in Bangalore and the Semi-conductor Laboratory that forms part of India's Space Department. Private companies are also taking part.

Reply to
vorange
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I call bullshit - yesterday was the "release" date but nothing was actually released - check the gadget sites (Gizmodo, Engadget, Wired).

Reply to
larwe

Complete bullshit, impossible. We will see that it is a scam soon enough. For $10 you can't even build a desktop, let alone a laptop.

If the Chinese can't make it for less than $100, no one can.

Reply to
Viin

Confirmed!

Reply to
larwe

Confirmed!

Cheer up - I'll be launching my $50 car tomorrow so you still have something to look forward to. [caveat, its a tyre]

--
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Richard.

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Reply to
FreeRTOS.org

Unfortunately it turns out not to be a laptop.

Its some kind of low power storage device with ethernet and wi-fi. Its purpose appears to be to download textbooks wirelessly and then have them printed up at some print shop.

But the printing cost (unless its govt run free printing shops that are setup) are likely to destroy the cost advantage of such a device.

This is no substitute for a real laptop. What is needed is something that can stream live and archive podcasts of video lessons like youtube, display downloaded textbook pages, maybe even allow the student to scribble on with a makeshift pen. Something handheld. That would be a true learning aid.

I don't see the practical application for this device.

Reply to
vorange

Neither does anyone else. It's a PhD project run wild with government funding. It probably also lost quite a bit in translation.

Reply to
larwe

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