Monday, February 2, 2009

$10 Laptop

Posted below is the link to the article about $10 laptop in India, which will be unveiled in India on the 3rd of Feb 2009.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/India/Rs_500-laptop_display_on_Feb_3/articleshow/4049914.cms

I will update the blog as more information is available.

4 comments:

  1. The financial Times article calls it a $20 laptop....
    The article is reproduced below... for easy reference.

    India to follow $2,000 car with $20 laptop

    By James Lamont in New Delhi

    Published: February 1 2009 19:32 | Last updated: February 1 2009 19:32

    India is planning to produce a laptop computer for the knockdown price of about $20 (€16, £14), having come up with the Tata Nano, the world’s cheapest car at about $2,000.

    The project, backed by New Delhi, would considerably undercut the so-called “$100 laptop”, otherwise known as the Children’s Machine or XO, that was designed by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology of the US.

    The Children’s Machine, which received a cool reception in India, is the centrepiece of the One Laptop Per Child charity initiative launched by Nicholas Negroponte, the computer scientist and former director of MIT’s Media Lab. Intel launched a similar product, called Classmate, in response.

    India’s $20 laptop would also undercut the EeePC, made by Taiwan’s Asustek. The EeePC was the first ultra-cheap, scaled-down laptop (a new category known as a netbook) launched worldwide through commercial channels. It does not have a hard drive and sells for $200-$400.

    India’s “Sakshat” laptop is intended to boost distance learning to help India fulfil its overwhelming educational needs. It forms part of a broader plan to improve e-learning at more than 18,000 colleges and 400 universities. However, some analysts are sceptical that a $20 laptop would be commercially sustainable and the project has yet to attract a commercial partner.

    A prototype will go on show at a National Mission on Education launch in Tirupati, Andhra Pradesh, tomorrow. Pioneered in India by scientists at the Vellore Institute of Technology, the Indian Institute of Science in Bangalore, the Indian Institute of Technology in Madras and at the state-controlled Semiconductor Complex, the laptop has 2Gb Ram capacity and wireless connectivity.

    R.P. Agrawal, secretary of secondary and higher education, said last week that the cost of the laptop was about $20 a unit, but he expected that to fall. He also said he expected the units to be commercially available in six months.

    India faces the huge challenge of finding ways to equip its large population, more than 550m of whom are under the age of 25, with contemporary skills. It needs to sustain high economic growth and spread development across the country.

    During the next six years, by some estimates, India will need to create another 1,500 universities. Educational institutions in the UK and US are lining up to become partners to help with this huge projected tertiary-level expansion.

    Pressure is building on the government to permit foreign investment into the sector and use public-private partnerships to meet some of the demand. Leading universities across the world, such as Kellogg School of Management in the US and Imperial College in the UK, are exploring different models, including faculty partnerships, distance learning and setting up campuses.

    But the government appears to favour turning to technology ahead of international partnerships to bring people into higher education.

    Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2009

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    © Copyright The Financial Times Ltd 2009.

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  2. I thought this article was interesting. However, I have read a few articles on the environmental concerns regarding this project. This is not very recent, but the argument is there: http://www.worldchanging.com/archives/003881.html

    This article brings up the issue of materials used to build these computers and how to dispose of them.

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  3. I read an article on the $10 laptop which describes how it failed to meet expectations. The device did not even have a screen but affordability is likely to increase penetration of such laptops. Link to the article is give below.

    http://www.rediff.com/money/2009/feb/09the-story-behind-the-dollar-10-laptop.htm

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  4. I think it is not a feasible idea as it lacks the screen. A more realistic idea is $100 laptop by MIT

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