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India Hopes to Make $10 Laptops a Reality

sas-dot writes "We all know Nicholas Negroponte's $100 OLPC. India, which was a potential market, rejected it. India's Human Resources Development ministry's idea to make laptops at $10 is firmly taking shape with two designs already in and public sector undertaking Semiconductor Complex evincing interest to be a part of the project. So far, the cost of one laptop, after factoring in labor charges, is coming to $47 but the ministry feels the price will come down dramatically considering the fact that the demand would be for one million laptops."

4 of 311 comments (clear)

  1. Re:As if! Look at the breakdown costs... by Bloke+down+the+pub · · Score: 4, Insightful
    I agree. TFA says:

    the ministry feels the price will come down dramatically considering the fact that the demand would be for one million laptops
    Utter rubbish. Producing more units allows you to spread the fixed costs, but the cost can't go below the marginal cost, which is more or less the stuff mentioned by the parent (plus a battery).
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  2. Re:I must be living in a story book.. by NerveGas · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Watch "Born Into Brothels", and see just how much India is trying to do for the poor and unpriveliged. I could be wrong, but I think that India is the country with the starkest difference between the amount of wealth and the amount of adject poverty.

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    Oh, you're not stuck, you're just unable to let go of the onion rings.
  3. Re:I must be living in a story book.. by cHALiTO · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yeah, god forbid they actually try and go around building their own tools, or *gasp* even maybe gain some experience in the field!! ZOMG! what are they thinking?? I mean, after all its INDIA, right? like they live in huts and are just now discovering 'electricity'!

    "Made in Japan" didn't mean much for quality right after WW2 either, you know. Look at them now. That doesn't mean India is going to pull it off, but sure as hell they should try, and that would be FAR more helpful for poor indian kids and their families than the laptops themselves.

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    "Luck is my middle name," said Rincewind, indistinctly. "Mind you, my first name is Bad." -- Terry Pratchett
  4. Re:I must be living in a story book.. by MBGMorden · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yes, but that's what they cost here in the US already.

    Still though, if they are open minded with this thing, $10 *might* be acheivable. I'm talking about going with a non-x86 chip; whatever cheapo processor they can find. Believe me, once upon a time I surfed the web, checked email, wrote papers, and generated spreadsheets just fine on a 486 25mhz and 4MB of ram - using a full GUI. Previous to that the Amiga's and other computers were doing the same on less hardware than that.

    Custom code the OS (in assembler if you have to), realize that you're targeting people who have never used a computer and as such they won't find it "too slow", and you can do some amazing things on hardware that would be considered "obsolete" by our spoiled populace. As a matter of fact, give it a cheap, low-res mono-LCD display (kinda like a graphing calculator but a bit larger - at least 8") and put a text-based OS on there. Still give it networking, and put Lynx and Mutt on there. I guarantee kids will learn from it and be grateful.

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    "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain