I can't tell from the story whether it is Industrial Policy 
Rajeeva Ratna Shah or the BBC reporter who doesn't understand 
the Simputer, but it *has* TTS, vaice recognition, e-mail, VoIP, 
and voicemail. Certainly Encore Technologies and Picopeta will 
explain clearly to the Ministry that we have the capabilities 
they are looking for.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/south_asia/3235553.stm

Indian drive to bridge IT chasm
India has a wealth of IT experience
India is to spend more than $2.5bn to help bridge a growing 
technological gap between its urban and rural areas.

The government says it wants to develop a low-cost computer that 
could take voice commands by illiterate people.

Postal workers are already piloting using handheld computers to 
download and deliver e-mails to villagers.

The four-year plans were announced by Secretary for Industrial 
Policy Rajeeva Ratna Shah at a technological fair in the 
southern city of Bangalore.

Widening gap

Indian cities such as Bangalore and Hyderabad continue to grow 
fatter on the proceeds of their technological booms, says the 
BBC's Charles Haviland at the fair.

But critics, he says, have pointed to the widening technological 
gap between the cities and the countryside where more than 70% 
of India's people live.

        
This will enable us to cut corruption
Rajeeva Ratna Shah
Secretary for Industrial Policy
Mr Shah acknowledged this when announcing the measures - which 
have yet to gain final approval.

"You do not want to get into a situation where ICT [information, 
communication and technology] and its progress create social 
chasms and economic chasms between the haves and have-nots," Mr 
Shah told the gathering.

"Advent of computers could make these much wider as you will have 
more haves and have-nots will become more deprived," the 
minister said.

The plans include developing an interactive internet device which 
can take voice commands from villagers and operate in many 
languages.

It would resemble the Simputer - a handheld device launched two 
years ago by Indian engineers which reads web pages aloud in 
native Indian languages - but would also include e-mail, 
voicemail, text-to-speech and internet access, Mr Shah said.

Corruption

In one trial project near Delhi, postal employees are already 
downloading e-mails on portable devices and delivering them to 
villagers, who can reply in the same way.

"It is offline connectivity. But at least once a day there is a 
chance to send a message around the world," Mr Shah said.

The Simputer - to help the illiterate
The minister also announced that India would soon launch a portal 
to let all corporations deal directly online with the 
government.

"This will enable us to cut corruption," Mr Shah said.

This is part of a wider plan to spread what is known as 
e-governance, or government by computer, our correspondent says.

One element which is spreading is the computerisation of land 
records which lets farmers see these records instantly rather 
than waiting for months as before. 
-- 
Edward Cherlin, Simputer Evangelist
Encore Technologies (S) Pte. Ltd.
Computers for all of us
http://www.simputerland.com, http://cherlin.blogspot.com
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