---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Thu, 18 Apr 2002 11:37:25 +0530 (IST)
From: Frederick Noronha <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [GKD] Simputer, Hovering Between Hope and Impatience

----------------------------------------------------------------------
RELATED LINKS

Simputer                www.simputer.org
Simputer Mailing List   www.groups.yahoo.com/group/simputer/
PicoPeta                www.picopeta.com
Swami Manohar           [EMAIL PROTECTED]
----------------------------------------------------------------------

SIMPUTER, HOVERING BETWEEN HOPE AND IMPATIENCE...

By Frederick Noronha
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

[Edited version published in the April 1, 2002 issue of Express
Computes/IndiaComputes! section... www.expresscomputeronline.com]

SITTING IN THE PALM of one hand, this small computing device that
promises to emerge out of Bangalore has generated a mix of hope and
pessimism that few hardware products from India ever have. But will the
Simputer work as promised?

Fighting back no-sayers and pessimists, the teams working on the
Simputer -- a simple, inexpensive, multilingual computing device that
could help take the benefits of IT to the masses -- are working on
determinedly.

Not surprisingly, after years of evoking surprise and garnering
headlines even while on the drawing-boards, the fatigue is beginning to
show. For some, the finish-line seems close. To others, the
disappointment of the Simputer in meeting its dates of being available
for sale sometime at end-2001 is only further proof that this product is
indeed 'vaporware'.

On the Yahoogroups! mailing-list set up for the Simputer project, over a
thousand members watch-on hopefully. But the inability of techies -- and
specially techies from this part of the globe -- to explain things to a
non-technical audience, might have left everyone guessing what's going
on.

Some months down the line, we'll know who's right. But what's at stake
is not just a promised product, but rather a valiant battle to
drastically shift the turf in the debate over what role IT should play
in India.

It helped make the point that affordable solutions for countries like
India will have to come from countries like India itself. That Indians
have the skill and talent, if not the optimism. And that the right
vision can play a massive role in taking us that critical inch closer to
finding our long-neglected solutions.

The story of the Simputer is not just one about its price (though this
is an important issue, as stressed below), and whether it could keep to
its promised production schedule or not. There are, in fact, many other
vital issues that come up.

But while the Simputer experiment is being watched closely across the
globe, a certain amount of impatience is visible from within India
itself.

In early March 2002, Reuter reported that the low-cost handheld computer
developed by seven Indian engineers to take the Internet to rural masses
will start rolling out in May. Originally expected to cost $200, it
would now cost $50 more, Vinay Deshpande, chief executive of
Bangalore-based Encore Software, was quoted as having told the
international news agency.

In India, critics of the Simputer project point to the delays in it
hitting the market, the inability to stick to the promised US$200 price
level, and some question whether the product would click at all.

LOWERING COSTS
--------------

Much of the Simputer fate depends on what price it can be put out at.

Its advantages are premised on the fact that it could cost about
one-third the price of a PC, and about the same as a colour TV set. If
buyers could be convinced that this is a useful tool, such a device
could reach millions more who are otherwise not touched by computing
anyway.

Prof Swami Manohar, CEO of the Bangalore-based PicoPeta Simputers Pvt
Ltd, told this correspondent that things are going at a "hectic pace"
these days.

"The primary challenge is funding. However, we are hopeful of solving
that problem. The good news is that, justifying the Simptuer licensing
model, there are now two companies competing to provide Simputers:
PicoPeta and Encore. So there is now a challenge to keep prices down,
improve quality and to improve the product and software," he argues.

PicoPeta's first field trial, and first funded project, are expected to
start anyday now in Chhattisgarh. "We will be deploying about 75
Simputers, one per panchayat, in the district of Mahasamund. This
project is funded by the South Asia Foundation and is actively supported
by the state government," Manohar said.

Sounding optimistic, he said: "Our first production units from Bharat
Electronics has started arriving. We still have to do lots of testing
etc, but should be able to scale up soon.

But to the basics first: what makes the Simputer special, if at all?

DeepRoot Linux CEO Abhas Abhinav, based in Bangalore, argues that one
needs to understand the Simputer's main features -- text to speech
synthesis in Indian languages, pen based input method (called
tap-a-tap), portable palmtop sized foot print, Linux powered, open
hardware licensing, and the smart-card interface, among others.

"The intended use of these features (and hence the simputer) is for
rural areas... The text-to-speech features, portable size and low power
requirements are meant to be of immense use to people in these areas,"
he notes.

Some applications that have been suggested in the past have been
micro-banking applications, rural commerce, and micro-credit
applications, notes Abhinav, a young Linux developer spearheading
value-added product development projects based on the Free GNU/Linux OS
at an equally young Linux start-up company.

But it's not that there are no problems. There are many! Economic,
technological, market-related... even the ability to communicate our
ideas, and the ability to have faith in ideas originating from the Third
World.

Abhinav points out that Simputer would cost Rs 9000 only in quantities
of "hundred thousands". So, if scale is not attained, the Simputer's
utility is likely to be hit by its high price, and low availability of
software, he feels.

As Abhinav argues, the Simputer, like any other mass hardware device, is
only economical in very large quantities. And to achieve these very
large quantities means that not only should a ready market exist, but
consumers (and resellers) should be willing to buy it.

"It should mean extremely high value to them for making them want to buy
it and should give them something extra that no competing
device/platform gives. To achieve this a rich suite of extremely useful
applications and an easy-to-use software development kit (SDK) should
exist," says he.

Abhinav's view is that the Simputer has an edge over any palmtop. "Palm
tops can't compute in Indian languages and don't have text-to-speech
interfaces for Indian languages. They are also not aimed for the mass
market that Simputer is and still have a more elitist user community,"
he notes.

Abhinav notes that the Simputer team has got a "lot of focus" on the low
cost mass market computing -- more than any other project or initiative.
This could mean a potential of spawning many more similar projects
resulting in greater innovation in this area, he argues.

Abhas Abhinav wishes the Simputer team had spent more time -- of course,
a highly scarce commodity -- and investment in convincing others to
design software for the Simputer. More of an investment could have gone
into usable interfaces, and there could have been less of a focus on
specialised hardware and "costly development", suggests the CEO of
DeepRoot Linux.

But he feels scalability of the Simputer could pose problems as "there
is little scope for further hardware expansion and software is limited
by this as well."

"Simputer's utility, therefore, is dependent upon how efficiently the
Simputer group can turn the technological value of the product into
something tangible for the masses as well... what we have today is a
great technological base for doing these wonderful things, but no really
usable applications to use it," says Abhinav.

One supporter of the project, not wanting to be quoted, says we need
more experiments like these because the hardware needs of India are
different that the needs of countries like the US. One parameter for
example is affordability and a $1000 PC is 1/30th of the per capita
income of an Amercan but is 2.5 times *greater* than the per capita
income of an Indian!

But, he argues: "Some people have asked me if the Simputer is a failure
and I replied by saying that two years is too short a time frame to
judge any new technology.  Also, as I understand it, the Simputer is
more differentiated at the software level and I think the hybrid icon
and speech-based interface is the right way forward for Indian masses."

Guntupalli Karunakar, based in Mumbai who has been working on
GNU/Linux-based Indian language solutions and taking computing to the
commonman, argues that the Simputer has a potential as a shared
community device through its smart-card interface. "But it all depends
on the number and variety of applications that can be run on it," says
he too.

"One reason I think that has prevented Simputer coming into market early
on is because major components (processor, memory, LCD dislay etc) are
not easily available in local markets, and have to be imported. That
too, in bulk. So I can't build one of my own even if I have the money.
If the raw materials were avialable locally, we would probabaly have had
'DIY Simputer kits' if not complete Simputers," says he.

Karunakar voices concern over the fact that since there is no immediate
money to be seen, existing players really dont want to take risk, or
waste time and money on it. "They either find the product unintersting,
or are waiting for the small players (read: Picopeta/Encore ) to take it
to the critical mass level, If it succeeds then they will jump in with
all might," argues he.

Sticking to the sub-$200 price promised can be tough though. "At least
not in this year. It's a chicken-and-egg situation. Unless there's a big
demand, Simputers won't be mass manufactured, which means cost will be
high initiallly for the few kits that get made," believes Karunkar.

MOST HAVEN'T SEEN ONE
---------------------

Attention for the Simputer is also coming from far and wide, though the
lack of hardware pieces in the market mean that few have actually seen a
Simputer.

Dietrich Mueller-Falcke is a German researcher who did his Phd on the
use of ICTs on small businesses in India. He has presented the Simputer
as an "innovative idea to bring information to the poor" at the annual
meeting of Euforic, a European Development Policy group, that was
attended by the European Commissioner for Development and Humanitarian
Aid.

Mueller-Falcke says the Simputer "might be very useful if there is
valuable content available, i.e. content management is crucial."

Comparing a Simputer with a PDA would be unfair, he feels, since with a
PDA one would still need a mobile phone attached to get online.  But, he
adds that the Simputer needs to hit the market speedily, "because the
PDA market is developing rapidely and with the advent of GPRS and UMTS
in Europe, new functionalities will be added soon to these devices".

"(One of the advantages could be the) export opportunity. I would also
like to get one! It would be great if export could finance even lower
prices for rural villagers. That would be a great economic model,"
argues Geert Lovink, Sydney-based media theorist and Net critic.

Bruce Girard, a researcher and coordinator of Comunica, a network
specialising in the convergence of independent broadcasting and new
media. is optimistic too.

He notes: "The Simputer has design features that make it well-suited as
a shared-use machine. The way that low-cost 'smartcards' have been
incorporated into the design, for example, means that: (i) your data is
keep securely in your own card, rather than on a network and; (ii)
configuration settings are portable so if you use the Simputer in the
library, at school, in a public call booth, or in another town, you will
always have your own interface and data at hand."

He praises the Simputer's design aspects that support its use as a
shared-use device -- "a CDA (Community Data Assistant) rather than a
PDA". This, he says, opens up new application potential in schools,
medical facilities, public booths, etc.

NOT ALL CONVINCED
-----------------

There are some who are skeptical about whether the Simpter can deliver.

Dr. Akhtar Badshah, Executive Director of the Seattle-based Digital
Partners, and an expat of Indian origin, feels this is a product with
value. But, says he, "unless is becomes very user friendly and can
attract multiple users it will not work".  Badshah argues that "the
Linux language has its limitations for interface with other devices.
There are today much better designed and UI friendly devices available
that can serve the same purpose".

Badshah warns India has still not demonstrated that it has "real
capability in producing very good and reliable products in many other
fields".

Says he: "I think the value of the Simputer is that it focused the
debate on the potential of a market that can be tapped.  $200 is not low
cost and prices of devices are falling all over the world and as I said
there are other devices that are available for less than $50 that can
also play such a role if adapted."

If he had a say in designing the Simputer all over again, Badshah says
he would would bring in other partners from others parts of the world to
make the devices really a great machine which is has terrific graphical
user-interface, one that is  good to look at and can deliver results.

Says he: "The machine when I saw it could not interface with Windows and
that is a big limitation which may have been solved.  It is rather
bulky. And now there is competition from other sectors."

Technical Director of Archeanit in Hyderabad S. Goswami, is more
dismissive. He calls the Simputer "vaporware". Says he: "Forget about
low cost palmtops, the competition will be from devices like agenda vr3
(check agendacomputing.com)." Simputer got too much publicity too early,
Goswami believes.

Ashhar Farhan bluntly calls the Simputer is a solution in search of a
problem. Startup engineer Farhan, presently creating peer-to-peer VoIP
technologies, says he takes a deep personal interest in low-intermediate
(or 'appropriate') information technologies.

Says he: "It doesnt fit into any of the standard classifications of a
mobile computer. It is not a replacement for _personal_ digital
assitants like the palm or pocket PC based systems because it uses Linux
which is not meant for instant-on, diskless, graphical interactions of
'bursty' nature (for example, flip open, check a phone number, flip it
close). It is also not a replacement for industrial strength robust
mobile computers like those from symbol and intermec. The Simputer wont
even last a few hours in harsh environmennts."

He's also skeptical of the Simputer's Open Design. Says Farhan: "It's
design is as open as an Ipaq or palm design. There is nothing in it to
circumvent the most costly part of a hardware design: the premium price
of the chips due to the proprietory architecture of the chips
themselves. It is like having written a GPL software that can compile
only on Microsoft's Visual C++ MFC classes."

But, for him too, that this product comes from the Third World is really
important. "The fact that we have been able to assemble and operated a
complete computer of this level is far more of a technology leap than
CDAC calling its networked Sparc boxes a new supercomputer. It is
probably the most innovative hardware project we have seen in India. it
deserves high marks. I am full of praise for the technological
achievements especially sitting in India. However, i have reservations
about the social and business potential of this project," says Farhan.

Mayuresh Kathe, the young CEO of Tisya, who has himself been working on
a low-cost solution to spread computing in India, questions the
relevance of the Simputer "given the size, cost, application set and
market positioning".

Says he: "Technically speaking, the power packed in the Simputer is a
lot more than is required off a handheld. It would have been wiser if
they had make something like the Sharp Zaurus (keyboard), or HP Jornada
(keyboard, WebCam, stereo sound)."

But Kathe says that "people the world over" feel that India is now ready
for investment on the hardware front. During a visit to Taiwan,
companies there were ready to setup development and manufacturing bases
in India, says he.

"I guess, the main contribution from the Simputer would be the fact that
it comes from a Third World country. What I found to be really
impressive was the fact that, the guys from IISc did manage to _do_it_
," says Kathe.

Kathe praises the software effort as commendable, but criticises the
hardware initiative as "pathetic".

Says Nagpur-based paediatrician-turned-PHP programmer Dr Tarique Sani:
"After waiting almost a year for the Simputer to appear I finally opted
to buy myself a Palm505. Need I say more? It has been in the making for
too long!!"

On the price front, Dr Sani argues that a $200 price tag could make it
affordable to the Indian junior executive. "But is the Simputer targeted
at them?" he asks. "If we are talking about rural India then it *will
not sell* unless the farmer is shown its usefulness, I heard that
fishermen around the Indian coast now carry GPS recievers which are just
as costly as Simputer - but the the usefulness of GPS is immediately
apparent...." Sani is CTO of SANIsoft, and co-author of recently
published book "Profesional PHP4" by Wrox Press U.K.

Says Dr Arun Mehta, of radiophony.com and indataportal.com: "I'd
consider a Simputer where I want portability and Indian language
support, or need to use smart cards. Unfortunately, smart cards haven't
picked up yet, and I suspect that has something to do with the high IP
costs that go into each card."

"Technology cannot afford to sit still: what might have been a great
design a year or two ago, is old hat today. The Simputer doesn't have
the economic muscle behind it for ongoing innovation at the furious pace
devices like the Handspring and Palm are exhibiting," regrets Dr Mehta.

"We should first look for a problem, the solution of which makes a
serious impact on peoples' everyday lives, and then find a solution for
it, which might involve some hardware design. The Simputer, in some
ways, is a solution looking for a problem," in Mehta's view.

Says Aditya Sood, founder of the CKS-B (Centre for Knowledge Societies),
which is closely monitoring the use of IT for development: "The Simputer
is an important stage in hardware innovation and thinking in India. Its
areas of greatest application are likely to be in process automation and
data collection."

But, he feels, since its conception and prototyping, the Simputer has
always been vulnerable to Moore's law, which currently has palmtops
hovering below the Simputer price. "I think this is a serious issue,
because minor innovations like regional language voice with English data
entry could dramatically cut into Simputer's potential market," says
Sood.

He sees the Simputer's uniqueness largely in terms of the fact that it
came from a Third World country -- and that too being envisaged early,
in 1998-99. In addition, it is also an open design, based on the
GNU/Linux platform, and in Indian languages, notes Sood.

There has been a great deal of hype, as is normal in the technology
field, but this is not the real reason for the limited success of it in
development initiatives. The major problem, in my view, has to do with
inadequate understandings of rural economy and society, which prevents
technical designers from understanding what to design for. Superior
social research conducted prior to technology development, rather than
subsequent to technology development is the key. one might call this
approach 'ethnographic design'," says Sood, whose interest lie in
education, the social sciences and design, apart from technology.

FAITH RETAINED
--------------

But despite all the problems, there are others who retain their faith
and optimism.

Prof Ashok Jhunjhunwala of IIT-Madras, known worldwide for his attempts
at taking affordable telephony solutions to the Indian commonman, sees
this as an "excellent" tool for urban India, specially with sales and
service persons.

Even if he sees the Simputer as not being low-cost as of now, he says
"this (the affordability factor) is key and work needs to be done on
it".

"Open design is  a big plus. Services need to be developed on it. It
will have limited use today in rural areas; but tomorrow it can build
up," says an optimistic Jhunjhunwala. He points out that there is "no
clear strategy and support from the government side (with) different
people are pulling it in different directions."

Jhunjhunwala however says he would like to see "more hardware
integration" in this potentially-useful product. He believes it still
needs to make a stronger business case. It could be difficult to be sold
at below $200, he suggests.

Prakash Advani of FreeOS.com, the Mumbai-based international network
supporting all forms of free Operating Systems, says negatives at this
critical point of time could "de-motivate" the key movers behind the
Simputer project.

"I think its a great concept. It has tremendous pottential but needs to
prove it metel fast. It's not important what you compare with it. What's
important is if I have a device which can send emails and cost $100 will
I pay for something which does email and also allows me to play MP3 for
$500?," Advani asks.

Simputer's main contribution, argues Advani, is the fact that is
developed in India for the Indian market. So its developers understand
the Indian midset the best. Localisation would be great selling point,
he feels.

Advani contents that the global market needs more project which build
products for the developing countries like India. "We also need to be
users of IT. We export lot of software but don't use them internally. We
need to increase the PC penetration, automate everything from government
records to banks, etc. As well as webenable everything," says he.

Advani suggests the Simputer team needs to closely monitor the design of
Sharp Zaurus PDA which also runs Linux. "They can definitely take some
clues from there such as using Quotopia as the platform," says he.

He says the Simputer team needs to maintain a low price, even if this
means losses initially. Otherwise the volumes simply won't come in, and
prices won't be able to drop. Delivery on time is important. The
Simputer needs to be made "more usable", and could be a better looking
device too, says he.

Narasimha Prabhu of iNabling Technologies, the firm that came out with
the iStation that was expected to revolutionise email access at a
low-cost, views the Simputer as a handheld computer "useful mainly for
data collection for field purposes".

"Simputer is much more than a low cost-palmtop. Simputer can have many
more applications like text to speech, customized applications for
specific target segments," he concedes. India,

But Prabhu questions whether the Simputer would actually make it as a
low-cost product "since it is not yet available commercially". Says he:
"There is very little funding for innovative projects which are quite
risky in terms of business. Most of the venture funding is going into
software services or more proven business models in India (other than
dotcom related). Infrstructural bottleness also contribute to the
delays."

Prabhu also argues that the publicity received by the Simputer seems to
be bit more than deserved. "Till date simputer is still in laboratory
phase. No commercial operation has started. The ruggedness, pricing all
depends on bulk production," he contends. But he concedes that its
scalability seems to be good. Software interface and usability will
improve as more and more applications are ported, says he.

"Customer acceptance of the product is yet to be seen," says he.
Uncertainity of the market potential, and the fact that "unproven
technology" was being tried out could have made industrialists a bit
reluctant in coming to support this product, says he.

HARDWARE INNOVATION?
--------------------

Given this background, should a country like India then go in for
greater hardware innovation?

Researcher Bruce Girard has no doubts: "Absolutely. India has a
diistinct set of problems that are often best addressed with distinct
technology. And, unlike many smaller countries, it has the human capital
pool and the market to allow it to embark on technology paths that will
better serve its needs than those imported from the USA or Europe."

Girard contends that successful technologies developed for use in India
will also help other less-industrialised countries which share the same
infrastructural problems but only have access to technology designed for
the conditions found in Europe and the USA.

Jhunjhunwala, who has long argued that India needs to find its own
solutions to boost low-cost telephony, says that the country simply has
to go in for a greater degree of hardware innovation. "There is no
option," says he.

Engineer Farhan strongly believes that India needs to go in for more
hardware innovation, his critique of the Simputer approach
notwithstanding. Says he: "I would personally like to see a completely
GPLed microprocessor design that is scalable (like SUN's Sparc), open
and free (like some legacy processor cores), and small (RISC-based, so
that ordinary university students can afford to get some silicon made
out of their pocket money)."

Adds a not-pessimistic Farhan: "The road to hardware innovation is
necessarily through the simputer. It is an exciting and important
milestone in Indian IT history."

Dr Arun Mehta sees it differently. He is upset by the "unfortunate
attitude" in India which expresses itself in some variation of the
question, "If this is such a great idea, how come nobody else is doing
it?"

Says he: "We seem to mistrust home-grown technology.  Second, I suspect
most innovative projects promise the moon when they're trying to get
funding, and get there only by the time you have version 3 or
thereabouts. Our projects often don't have the financial backing for the
long haul. Also, the market in the country is small, and unless we
immediately look to marketing at a global level (which needs tremendous
marketing muscle too) we're out of the picture."

Says Mehta: "If a project like Simputer were to fail, it would put
development back across the hardware front in India, because people
would extrapolate from the Simputer and say that hardware development in
India is doomed to fail.  E.g. the government tried teletext, and it
failed: since then nobody has had any incentive to try digital content
delivery riding on TV or radio signals."

It's an absolute must for home-grown companies to venture into hardware
innovation, in India, he suggests. Some are already doing it -- like
Web-ezee, Sasken, Inablers, now HP Labs are innovating in this area. "We
should expect a wave of new options in the next two years," believes
Aditya Dev Sood of cks-b.org.

FreeOS.com's Advani argues that India should encourage more hardware
design development but doesn't agree that the country has the facilities
to do high quality manufacturing. "We should outsource to China, Korea
and Taiwan," he argues.

Prabhu of iNabling Technologies agrees, definitely must go in for
hardware innovation -- as this would meet the peculiarities of the
cost-sensitive local market.

India definitely needs to go in for greater hardware innovation, argues
Abhinav. "Hardware innovations are what stand between highly usable
computers and affordability," says Abhinav of DeepRoot Linux.

"Again the extent of hardware innovation is limitless. In the long run
it is this that will increase the value of a product -- not software
alone. To make a jump in technology affordability and applications,
hardware innovation is one of the best ways India can adopt. We don't
have a dearth of applications or need or market -- it's all about price
and the value of the product at that price," he adds.

Global Internet Policy Initiative managing director Eric S Johnson
argues innovation in India has much to lose from "the lack of an
infrastructure that would encourage an increase in communications
capacity".

Instead of the government trying to "milk the communication sector for
revenue", opening up of local loop (wired or wireless), the 2.4-gHz
frequency, VoIP, intercity dialling, mobiles and the like would yield
rich returns, he told this correspondent.

Has the product been over-hyped? Lovink is one of those who disagree.

"Compare this coverage with other IT news items. I would say that there
has not been enough press at all (internationally). Simputer is not just
a company or a specific computer. It is first and foremost an idea. A
concept which needs as much press coverage and criticism as possible,"
says he.

Abhas Abhinav of DeepRoot Linux says the favourable press has been well
deserved. "They at least got the focus shifted to low-cost computing for
the masses. And for that matter their objectives were also clear and
remarkable. As much as their work," says Abhinav.

To wrap-up, Prof Manohar says PicoPeta is currently making progress
along three fronts, keeping its focus as a Simputer solutions company:

* Deployment of the Simputer platform:  Extensive filed testing of the
Simputer solutions in areas as diverse as citizen empowerment,
education, microbanking, rural marketing and brand management for FMCG
companies etc. "These field trials will be leveraged to generate large
demands for Simputer solutions," says Manohar.

* Building Alliances and Partnerships: PicoPeta is building a strong
"ecosystem" by means of partnerships and alliances. For example: Markel
Foundation in the US and GraffitiWorkz in the US for targeting the
e-book market, AlittleWorld, to provide e-payment services through
STD/ISD booth operators, IIIT-Hyderabad for language technologies.

* Product and technology development: Improving the current product both
in terms of price and performance, enhancing the feature set of the
Simputer and building advanced versions.  Several software tools,
including improved IML browsers, IML content creation tools,
synchronization of the Simputer with PCs, have been developed and will
be tested out in the field trials.

CLOSELY WATCHED
---------------

Even within South Asia, where neighbours are often not friends due to
political differences, the Simputer experiment is being closely watched.
M. Khalid Rahman, editor in charge of Dawn Sciencedotcom, the weekly
feature magazine of daily Dawn, Pakistan largest daily, is upbeat about
the Simputer.

Says he: "I think Simputer is basically a poor-man's computer, and it
provides all the basic functions of a computer while giving the price
edge to the users."

Rahman argues that in all the SAARC countries, a special branch of
"affordable" technology should be dedicated to developing affordable
applications and innovations to suit the pocket of the common man.

Simputer, says he, is a "landmark achievement, opening new vistas of
affordable technology". As Rahman points out, we in the subcontinent
have certainly been falling short of the promise of a number of
IT-for-development projects because "our governments fail to think
objectively, and our enterpreneurs are mainly interested in making money
by all (fair/unfair) means".

Swedish journalist and researcher, Kerstin Lundell, recently in India to
study IT-for-development projects, says the Simputer seems like a very
good tool for a traveller in rural areas.  She says its promised low
cost would be one major attraction.

Says she: "It's marvellous that anybody tries to make a new computer
outside the big established corporations. Swedish companies has tried
and failed a couple of times. The big mainly American manufacturers are
so overwhelmingly dominant."

"I think many majors have had a wait and watch approach to the sector,
as it is only coming into its own right now. The major issue, though, I
think is whether anyone has the presence, reach and standing to stand
behind a new platform coming out of India. If this comes about, i think
it will be a fantastic success story," adds Sood.

"Basically, I think it"s great and I WANT it to work...," said one
US-based researcher, who has been following the potential of this
IT-for-development project for long now. With skeptics cynical and
optimists ever-hopeful, it's anyone's guess how this promised
wonder-product from India will shape up.


FOOTNOTE: India Computes! is presented by Frederick Noronha, the
co-founder of BytesForAll, a voluntary, unfunded venture focussing on
how IT and the Internet can benefit the commonman, particularly in South
Asia. This column appears monthly in Express Computer, a mainstream
Indian journal targetting the IT business community. This is the third
column, the earlier two focussed on giving schools access to computers,
and the growing contribution of Indians to GNU/Linux...


--
Frederick Noronha * Freelance Journalist * Goa * India 832.409490 / 409783
BYTESFORALL www.bytesforall.org  * GNU-LINUX http://linuxinindia.pitas.com
Email [EMAIL PROTECTED] * SMS [EMAIL PROTECTED] * Saligao Goa India
Writing with a difference... on what makes *the* difference



------------
***GKD is solely supported by EDC, an NGO that is a GKP member***
To post a message, send it to: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To subscribe or unsubscribe, send a message to:
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>. In the 1st line of the message type:
subscribe gkd OR type: unsubscribe gkd
Archives of previous GKD messages can be found at:
<http://www.edc.org/GLG/gkd/>

To unsubscribe from SURVPC send a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with 
unsubscribe SURVPC in the body of the message.
Also, trim this footer from any quoted replies.
More info can be found at;
http://www.softcon.com/archives/SURVPC.html

Reply via email to