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India Looks To Produce World's First $10 Laptop
The efforts thus far have yielded designs for a laptop that would cost about
$47; a $10 system remains the ultimate goal.
By Paul McDougall
InformationWeek
May 4, 2007 11:00 AM
One hundred dollars for a laptop? Highway robbery, according to policymakers
in India.
The country that last year said no to MIT luminary Nicholas Negroponte's
plan to introduce portable computers that would sell for a C-note is instead
aiming for laptops that would cost $10. That's roughly the price of a ham
sandwich in New York.
India's Ministry of Human Resource Development is spearheading the project,
with help from Semiconductor Complex, a state-sponsored designer and
manufacturer of integrated circuits. Officials from those organizations are
presently weighing system designs submitted by an engineering student from
India's Vellore Institute of Technology and a researcher from the Indian
Institute of Science in Bangalore.
The Times of India on Friday reported that the efforts thus far have yielded
designs for a laptop that would cost about $47, while a $10 system remains
the ultimate goal.
Last year, Negroponte's One Laptop Per Child Organization submitted a
proposal to the Indian government under which the group would have worked to
produce laptops for Indian students starting at $100. Indian officials at
the time criticized the proposal as insufficiently mature to be taken
seriously and rejected it.
Still, other countries in emerging regions have signed on to participate in
the OLPC program. Argentina, Brazil, Namibia, and Nigeria are among the
countries that are on board.
The OLPC organization has produced a reference design for a $100 laptop that
features an AMD Geode processor, a range of open-source software, and an
attached hand crank for power generation. The group has said it's also
considering other options for power generation, including a foot pedal.
India Looks To Produce World's First $10 Laptop
The efforts thus far have yielded designs for a laptop that would cost about
$47; a $10 system remains the ultimate goal.
By Paul McDougall
InformationWeek
May 4, 2007 11:00 AM
One hundred dollars for a laptop? Highway robbery, according to policymakers
in India.
The country that last year said no to MIT luminary Nicholas Negroponte's
plan to introduce portable computers that would sell for a C-note is instead
aiming for laptops that would cost $10. That's roughly the price of a ham
sandwich in New York.
India's Ministry of Human Resource Development is spearheading the project,
with help from Semiconductor Complex, a state-sponsored designer and
manufacturer of integrated circuits. Officials from those organizations are
presently weighing system designs submitted by an engineering student from
India's Vellore Institute of Technology and a researcher from the Indian
Institute of Science in Bangalore.
The Times of India on Friday reported that the efforts thus far have yielded
designs for a laptop that would cost about $47, while a $10 system remains
the ultimate goal.
Last year, Negroponte's One Laptop Per Child Organization submitted a
proposal to the Indian government under which the group would have worked to
produce laptops for Indian students starting at $100. Indian officials at
the time criticized the proposal as insufficiently mature to be taken
seriously and rejected it.
Still, other countries in emerging regions have signed on to participate in
the OLPC program. Argentina, Brazil, Namibia, and Nigeria are among the
countries that are on board.
The OLPC organization has produced a reference design for a $100 laptop that
features an AMD Geode processor, a range of open-source software, and an
attached hand crank for power generation. The group has said it's also
considering other options for power generation, including a foot pedal.