Scientific American Reviews 'Simputer' PDA
Bill Kendrick writes "The 'Simputer' (Simple, Inexpensive, Multilingual Computer), a Linux-based PDA developed by the Indian Institute of Science in Bangalore, India, and released a few weeks ago, has been reviewed by Scientific American, and they seem to like it!"
Does it have IR ports so i can trade my pokemon with friends?
Hand held computers are for kids, and adults who choose to let their jobs intrude into their personal life more than it has to.
"Prediction: within 10 years, Windows will be a Linux distribution." Me, 7-6-2016
Because the device can convert text to speech, it can help teach villagers how to read the local language, Kannada.
:)
I can read Kannadian too - I'm from Kannada. It's kinda cold, but hardly a third world country...
(ok, that was bad, moderators feel free to bury this one
Robots are everywhere, and they eat old people's medicine for fuel.
but the final paragraph of the article sums it up perfecly:
Perhaps the greatest obstacle for the Simputer, though, is cost. Will people in developing countries be able to justify the expenditure of $250 on a device that may be helpful but is not essential? When so many communities in the Third World still lack clean drinking water and adequate medical facilities, are computers really a priority?
AAA batteries cost more than AA batteries, and provide a lot less juice.
Stupid design flaw, right off the top.
Solar panels and a ni-cad power pack would be cheaper in the mid-term, and environmentally much more friendly. There's more ... just read the article.
Q: Can I create a Beowulf cluster using many Simputers?
/.er; in which case you know the answer!
A: You must be a
Its about time someone recognized the Beowulf Clustering needs of Slashdotters!
If you go by that screenshot, that thing must have 1280 resolution. You gotta love people who Photoshop screen mockups of web pages onto PDAs.
"Follow your Bliss." -- Joseph Campbell
It has a form of HWR based on writing into a grid. It's not real HWR, like you see with the Newton OS or CalliGrapher on WinCE, but real HWR doesn't exist anywhere on Linux to my knowledge, at least in a form available to regular folks.
Motorolla has it's QuickPrint software for Linux, but it requires quite a bit of MIPS compared to Newton HWR, and would be slow on something with a 206 MHz StrongARM. It's moot anyway, because you have to be an OEM to get your hands on it, I've never heard of a product using it other than the defunct Sonicblue ProGear tablet.
Working toward a usable PDA environment in the spirit of Newton OS: Dynapad
In addition, the Simputer has a program called Tapatap that displays a three-by-three grid; you can input a letter or number by tapping on the squares of the grid in a particular sequence.
Welcome to interface hell.
Seriously, this idea probably won't fly. As they say in the article, mobile phones will be much more practical and cheaper, and given the user interface description (ok, only half the story, but anyway), much easier to use. There is little that this device could do that someone couldn't accomplish with a phone (except for, perhaps, teaching literacy, but can't you do that with picture books or cassette tapes or something cheaper?)
Robots are everywhere, and they eat old people's medicine for fuel.
$250!? For a poverty-stricken Indian farmer? You have got to be kidding me! Some make this much in six months! I don't think I'd starve for six months to get a "Simputer." It seems to me that it would be smarter for the village to buy a cheap-o computer of two. You can get an okay computer with a monitor for $500 ("okay" is a relative term, but what are a whole bunch of internet-challenged Indians going to do with a 3.06GHz computer? All they need is a simple Pentium II and a 15" monitor)...arguable five times as good as the "Simputer." And regarding power: why not sell a solar adapter?
"Put together by the Simputer Trust, a nonprofit organization based in Bangalore, India. This year Encore Software, a Bangalore company that licensed the technology from the trust (not to be confused with the California software company of the same name), plans to sell thousands of the handheld devices, capping an effort that began in 1998."
Q: What is your business plan?
A: 1)Make Simputers.
2) Sell it to people with hardly any money.
3)???
4) Profit!
yep...they love slashdot.
nbfn
for developing "niche" applications, aimed for specific ltasks. I don't believe Simputer alone does any magic - but it is the corner stone for providing the exact tool for exact needs - such as for creating an application for increasing milk productivity. You would not guess how complicated (and important) issue something like that can be. There are zillions of cases like this which could be solved with very simple (and intentionally very simple) applications. Before, it was just impossible to have that application reach those in need.
But it would need conciderably more effort to get to work....
It needs far more power which you will need to generate. The simputer only needs a litle bit that can even be generated by hand...
Its also a lot more portable.
Jeroen
Secure messaging: http://quickmsg.vreeken.net/
This is not a troll just a question, but I fail to see a real advantage of this on the last PDA from Dell. Which does cost the same price if my memory serves Well.
The Indian Paysan with not really care if it rans Linux or not, the most important factor is the price.
Though they may seem like cheap, obsolete devices made for third worlders, these could open up new opportunities for them -- how many people went from the love of ancient early 1980s computers into lucrative computer careers? Don't laugh at these simple devices -- one man's trash is another man's treasure.
If these PDAs turn more of the Indian population from people to be (yes, sadly) exploited for manual labor into a skilled labor force, it would greatly banish poverty and help build a viable middle class in the third-world country.
Zaurus, Zaurus, Zaurus.
But then, I'm not regular folks.
Fascism should more properly be called corporatism, since it is the merger of state and corporate power.
Scientific American Reviews 'Simputer' PDA
India Officially Launches Simputer
Simputer Runs Into Problems
Get Ready For The Simputer
Handhelds for the Blind?
Slashback: Brilliance, Delay, Simputer
Slashback: Space, Smallness, Pigeons
Simple Inexpensive Mobile Computer: The Simputer
Yes, we need to hit ALL of the third world countries. :-)
Fascism should more properly be called corporatism, since it is the merger of state and corporate power.
This is exciting technology. Every couple of months, it seems like we're moving closer to the day when I can carry a computer around with me wherever I go. In the long run, especially as it is portrayed in the many science fiction novels I read, humanity has nothing to lose and everything to gain from making computers more ubiquitous.
Something that occurs to me is that making decisions based on long term outcome can have unforseen, or undesirable, effects in the short term. Industrialization has been beneficial to everyone, but a few generations lived in filth and poverty when it was first introduced. Which doesn't mean that we shouldn't have industrialized in the early 19th century, just that maybe we should have thought about it a little more beforehand. Yeah, I know, 20/20 hindsight and all that.
I don't think there's really any danger to the people of India from this device. I do, however, fear that we may be putting ourselves at risk by permitting them to use this technology. India has always been unstable, and with both it and Pakistan in possession of nucular weapons, it might be better to keep powerful computers out of their hands. They shouldn't be denied access to them, but that access should probably be better monitored by the international community. For all intensive purposes, they pose a threat to our very nation. We need to make sure we don't allow the events of 911 to transpire again.
Karma: Good (despite my invention of the Karma: sig)
Many of these potential users are illiterate...
Spend the money for a literacy program in the first place.
as a 'soverign mediocroty' they clearly qualify as 4th world!
250-300? for that thing? WHY? This is such a dumb idea.
More over, if you are illiterate and poverty stricken, how do they expect you to pay for this?
Middle class i could understand, but the middle class might was well get a DELL or Ipaq.. much better for less
looks more like a national pride thing than anything else. Sort of saying.. yeah.. we can make PDAs too! tisk. pretty sad if you ask me.
The war with islam is a war on the beast
The war on terror is a war for peace
Seems like this answers a real direct need...except for the markets contact, I'm not sure what the simputer offers.
SO YOU'RE GOING TO DIE: The Comic for Dealing with Death
Used Palms go for $20-$50 on eBay. You could get possibly 10 Palm PDAs for the price of one of these. So can anyone tell me why this is better than flooding the country with a bunch of old and obsolete Palms?
India isn't some backwater, hick country. India is a vibrant technologically advanced world power. Almost 20% of Microsoft employees are of Indian descent, and that number holds across the industry. They have some of the best Mathematics schools in the world whose students outperform MIT and CalTech in international competitions every year. They have subsidized university for anyone who wants to go with extra scholarships for those who want to study the sciences. They have done well with their difficult soil and terrain using modern farming techniques and have made the desert blossom (a far cry from the barren wasteland of Pakistan, across the border).
Maybe if you left your house for a minute you'd notice that there is a whole world out there that isn't stuck in some Discovery Channel nature reserve. They don't live in mud huts and they don't scavenge for food. People across the world shop at supermarkets and have refrigeration and electricity. Just because you think they "need" this kind of hand-me-down crap to learn how to "purify water, how to diagnose simple ailments" doesn't make you a good person. It makes you an ignorant person. It marks you as one who hasn't taken the time to learn about other cultures and countries. And that is sad.
You're right. My point was that, in a remote location, rechargeables should be the ONLY option. Not throw-aways. And not for a target audience that has a family income of $5 per day.
Something you don't have to type in every time you post.
-B
Ash and Hickory, straight-grained and true, make excellent bludgeons, dandy for the cudgeling of vegetarians.
There are two companies selling Simputer -
(1) PicoPeta:
Simputer Development Kits (http://www.picopeta.com/products/simdek.php)
Products & Services (http://www.picopeta.com/products/index.php)
Simputer Development Kits PicoPeta's Simputer Development Kits are all that you would need to develop applications for the Simputer platform. Kits have the following components, and are available in three handy packages:
Components of the Simputer Development Kits (download as PDF)
1. Simputer units (with accessories - power supply, battery, bag, user manual, cover, stylus, serial cable)(specifications)
2. SmartCards
3. PC-based Dev. Tools
SimPCync (data transfer)
Snaps (PC-side graphical display)
Malacca (IML interace)
Layout Manager for IML
Flite (Text-to-speech in English)
PicoPeta Flash Cooker (loads OS)
Package Manager
Linux Distribution (includes Perl, TCL/Tk, MySQL)
Cross Compilation Tools (C/C++ toolchain, Arm libraries)
4. Simputer-side Software
Malacca (IML interace)
MySQL for Simputer
SQLite for the StrongArm
Perl for the StrongArm
TCL/Tk for the StrongArm
FileSync
Printer driver
Dhvani (Text-to-speech engine)
Tap-a-tap (soft keyboard)
Package Manager
5. Simputer Applications
Spreadsheet
Notepad
Scientific Calculator
Image Viewer
MP3 player
Web browser
Address Book
6. Developer Documentation (code samples, how-tos, tricks & tips)
7. Technical Support for one month (email and instant messaging)
You could also download the above information as a PDF file.
Denominations
Simputer Development Kits are available in the following denominations:
Platinum: 10 Simputers, 20 SmartCards, 10 licenses for software (pricing: Rs. 190,000 in India, US $4,599 overseas)
Gold: 5 Simputers, 10 SmartCards, 5 licenses for software (pricing: Rs. 98,000 in India, US $2,499 overseas)
Silver: 2 Simputers, 5 SmartCards, 2 licenses for software (pricing: Rs. 49,000 in India, US $1,299 overseas)
Who should buy Simputer Development Kits?
The short answer is, "anyone interested in developing software for a cutting-edge handheld computer."
The long aswer:
Software companies whose clients require mobile computing solutions based on SmartCards, Text-to-speech, a high degree of mobility, simplicity, computing power or Linux (Technical Advantages)
Engineering Colleges and other educational institutions who want their students to learn Embedded Systems, Linux, Handheld programming, Pervasive computing, Simple-to-use interfaces and non-Engligh interfaces in a hands-on manner
Corporates who want to empower their road warriors with a full-featured mobile computer (Business Advantages)
Use the Simputer Development Kits to conduct pilot projects in your company / at your client's organiation. In a typical case, a company may use 3 Simputers for development and testing say, a Sales Force Automation Application, while deploying 7 Simputers on the field (ie, with various user groups).
How to buy Simputer Development Kits Please contact us for details of payment, terms, delivery period etc.
(2)Encore Software Ltd :
http://www.simputerland.com
http://www.ncoretech.com/simputer/index.html
REPLY TO MY MESSAGE FROM CEO of Encore Technologies(S) Pte Ltd :
> Hi, Thanks for all the views and anxieties expressed vis a vis the Simputer and Sharp Zaurus. I would like to give a view to the world from an Encore Simputer perspective. 1. Sharp Zaurus or indeed any other PDA approaches the market from a product perspective. Simputer is a platform and we approach the market for Encore Simputer as being a customizable platform for industry vertical applications. We will provide the Simputer in various form factors - pocket sized, larger screen, embedded device etc. 2. We offer the Simputer along with a industry/enterprise specific solution as a dedicated, total offering. Not as an off-the-shelf product. 3. We are building a common platform for all our partners to leverage each others' strengths and offer their solutions globally. For example, at our recently conducted partner meet in Singapore, our partner who has developed and is currently implementing a solution for utility meter reading in India has demonstrated the solution to the rest of the partner community in meet representing 10 other countries. This solution attracted interest for Egypt, Mauritius, South Africa and Eastern Europe markets from where the other partners that were here hail from. One of the partners from UK has a solution for Insurance agents that has attracted interest in India. The number of such possibilities is limitless. In contrast, Software developers building solutions on the Sharp and other such devices have to fight among themselves as well as with the product developer to make a market. 4. A product's destiny in the market is determined by several factors - timing, pricing, specifications/features, as well as application/implementation. We do not have a drawback on any of these aspects. There could be an overlap in some specifications with Zaurus or other such products but that is in no way a threat to the Simputer and its potential or mission. 5. Members of the community who are committed to building solutions and businesses based on the Simputer should visit http://www.simputerland.com our partner portal and consider joining our partner program.
Best regards
Ravi Desiraju
CEO, Encore Technologies(S) Pte Ltd
From the slashback article: "We are a poor country. We cannot develop operating systems and platforms on our own."
Hmm, seems like they are doing ok in this instance.
A vacuum is a hell of a lot better than some of the stuff that nature replaces it with. - Tennessee Williams
1. Why not just buy a Dell? It'd be more powerful and cost only a little more.
By making a miniature computer of very low cost, the users can keep personal data on smart-cards and share one Simputer amongst many users. Thus the cost can be spread around. This could also be done with a laptop, but the power consumption and cost of a laptop much higher than this Simputer would be.
2. Why not just spend the money on picture books for literacy, or better farming tools, or condoms, or hand-soap?
Because the root causes of illiteracy, starvation, overpopulation, and unsanitary living are often educational. This one device, unlike picture books, could be used to teach literacy at many levels, as well as other languages and subjects (such as effective farming.) Throwing condoms at a population is useless without some sexual education / health propaganda. Unsanitary living is the same way -- many of the diseases caught by not doing a post-shit soap handwashing can be eliminated by washing one's hands in ash, which is free. Again, this problem is educational and/or propagandistic.
3. Why does it run on AAA batteries? Yecch!
The batteries can be rechargable. For usability and transportability, the Simputer should be small.
4. Why not just get a cell phone?
This thing has fairly high specs for a hand-held, and its cost will likely be defrayed by non-profit and governmental organizations. The design needs of cell phones go in a different direction -- they're targeted towards hip Japanese schoolgirls and soulless American yuppies. The Simputer is meant for communal use by the very poor (and remember, the design is pretty much open, so the problem-domain-targeted features can be upgraded). Also, where's the flash card slot on these cell phones? These machines need to be usable as a machine shared by a large group of people.
5. Why is it so expensive?
Again, shared computer amongst a poor group. They all chip in for the machine and their own smart card. This design -- and few others, I posit -- meet the needs of this problem domain.
Did I cover everything? What other reasons do folks have?
"Whatever happened to fair use?"
-- Duff-Man
According to the article, the simputer sometimes crashes if left idle for a while... I mean, c'mon, guys...
Either way -- they should check out dasher for text input... much better than the methods described. There was a slashdot story about it a while back...
After all, which would you rather have, a computer, or the ability to read?
Of course what you seem to have forgotten is that a computer is a great way of getting reading teaching out to areas of the world where there is very little or no existing educational infrastructure, and improving it where it does exist. If the computers have internet access, all the better, because then the student can communicate with teachers elsewhere. Sure, it's perhaps not as good as having a real, physical teacher there in the village, but it's a hell of a lot cheaper.
My nephew (age 4) learnt to read almost entirely using a computer, and he probably learnt earlier than he would have done without it, simply because the computer was always available to teach him (unlike his parents or nursery teachers). If it works for my nephew I don't see why it can't work for rural Indians - both children and adults.
India already has a lot of pollution control mechanisms. Plastic bags are banned in many Indian smalltowns. Delhi's buses are court-mandated to run on LPG alone.
There are a lot of implementation issues yes, but the pollution problem is getting serious attention in India nowadays.
More than mere navel gazing.
* The schematics, pdf and ORCAD(.dsn) files for the complete schematics of the Simputer
* Bill of materials in .xls and .pdf formats
* The layout and pcb details in PADS2000 format
I think this is the best thing about this product. They released these under the Simputer General Public License (SGPL). This means that any small companies, or better yet, universities can create their own version of the Simputer and perhaps improve upon it, even at the PCB level. Perhaps even downsize the PCB even more. Because they've provided schematics in OrCAD format, it makes it very easy to edit the design from the ground up, and spin your own new design. Having the bill-of-materials is great too, because you can see exactly which parts they used. This is TOTALLY NEW in the hardware business as far as I know. I have heard of OpenCores but that is different. I think this is a step in the right direction. When I was doing hardware on the job I used to always find myself and other at the company repeating old designs and designing PCBs for stupid things that could easily have been open-sourced by someone along the way. Like RS-232 to RS-485 converters. We found it cheaper to just spin our own PCBs than to buy these all packaged up, but it took a month just to do the schematics, PCBs, and then get the damn thing working.
My question is though, what is the motivation from the company's perspective to release their hardware designs as open source?
Note I said "real HWR," not character or stroke recognition. There are many packages available for Linux in general as well as with Qtopia on the Zaurus to provide character and stroke recognition, but no handwriting recognition, like Newton HWR or CalliGrapher on PocketPC, as I said above.
However, I'd love to be proved wrong though, but if the Z has real HWR, it must be incredibly new...
Working toward a usable PDA environment in the spirit of Newton OS: Dynapad
You can get a Dell Axim A5 for $199 and a lot more PocketPC hardware for less than $300. Of course, the PocketPC software sucks, but porting the Simputer software environment to such hardware shouldn't be too hard. The new low-end iPaq might be another good target and might be supported fairly soon by handhelds.org.
First of all I am somehow shocked by the racism and total lack of cultural perspective often shown here. Words like "Habib" and "dothead" remind me of the Sihk who was killed at his gas station in the US after 9/11 last year. Firstly, most Indians (not all but most) are Hindu. Secondly, lumping millions if not billions of people into one basket is below the level of even some of the more sickening trolls on this forum. Thirdly (and please don't take this as anti-American, because it's not meant that way), It often seems that people here compare items like this from their own social and economic perspectives. For the target audience, most of whom have never seen a computer before, arguments about the processor speed etc and other commercial systems, such as Dell's PDA or a Palm are not exactly useful. No one in this device's target audience can afford commercial WinCE or Palm software. For a village in India or CAR (Central African Republic) that has to club together to buy a device like plus a hand generator or a small solar cell, $20 for some software to do text to speech In Their Language (since the ability to read english is strangely not universal) is a lot of money in an area where the per capita annual income is about $400.
While the gist of the idea is an axcellent one, I agree completely with the SA article in that mobile phones will probably fit these people's needs better. Wireless communication is already more widespread in Africa than landlines and most mobile phones based on the symbian platform offer localised languages and extremely easy to use interfaces as well as the ability to load Java applications which can do extra tasks needed by these people.
It's very cheap and easy to teach people to read, all it takes is manpower, and that's an abundant resource in India. English is the main language of commerce and government in India, and overall literacy is 52%, not bad for an agrarian system. Instead of buying this obscenely expensive, battery-hungry computer, illiterate people would be better off clubbing together to pay for a teacher. If they then want a small computer they could do better on price and appropriateness.
Saying poor people don't need telephones is like saying they don't need roads because you can't eat roads. But how can you get vaccines to remote areas without decent roads, and how can people access local markets?
What really poor people need is some way of making a decent living, not food aid - except in an emergency. Cell phones are spreading rapidly in South Asia right now among surprisingly poor people. Thea aren't individually owned, either groups buy them or they are bought by very small entrepreneurs as pay phones, often supported by micro lending.
Poor people sometimes save for weeks or months to make a single phone call. This is mentioned in passing in the sciam article. It may seem abstract, but it's reality in poor countries.
I bragged about my Karma at a job interview but I didn't get the job.
Yeah. Percolation of information into the villages is good and all, but I live in India and fail to see why they didn't target their platform at a standard desktop PC.
Without doubt, a second-hand desktop could be purchased for the same price in India. Don't see how illiterate farmers would be coaxed to squint at a palm-sized b&w screen with arcane symbols. Nor do I see how one simputer per village is going to make people literate.
There are already initiatives for a Tamil and a Hindi linux distro - clearly, coupled with inexpensive desktops, these can take computer literacy a long way. I would still be skeptical about these delivering the three R's to the illiterate.
At any rate, the internet still is not something that a villager has access to. Even at cities, internet usage (via dial-up) costs 80 cents an hour. In villages, typically $2 an hour. And a typical middle class family pulls in $400 every month. A poor man earns only $40 a month.
In summary, I'd say: yes, the greatest handicap of the Indian peasant is lack of information. But the simputer is a remarkably bad solution.