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India Will Show Its $10 Laptop Prototype

Tech Ticker writes "The Indian Government last year announced the development of a cheap $10 laptop, but was later rectified as $100 laptop. Now the government has announced that HRD minister Arjun Singh will unveil the prototype of a Rs. 500 ($10) computer. The computer is developed by the Indian Institute of Science (IISc), Bangalore, and Indian Institute of Technology (IIT), Chennai. No specifications were revealed but DNA, a daily newspaper, has mentioned that it will be small and portable, will feature Wi-Fi, LAN, and expandable memory, and will operate on 2 watts of power."

9 of 374 comments (clear)

  1. Critical thinking anyone? by morgan_greywolf · · Score: 5, Insightful

    No specifications were revealed but DNA, a daily newspaper, has mentioned that it will be small and portable, will feature Wi-Fi, LAN, and expandable memory, and will operate on 2 watts of power.

    A little critical thinking here: How, exactly, would anyone build that for $10? How much is the cheapest of cheap WiFi adapters at retail? $30? $20? Okay, now how thin are those margins?

    I just don't see how they can pull all that off for $10.

    1. Re:Critical thinking anyone? by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That is a cheap graphing calculator!

      The TI-85 I needed for my high school algebra classes cost $90. A decade and a half later, that same model still exists and still costs $90. As far as I can tell, all they've changed in that time is the faceplate and replaced the proprietary serial connector with a USB plug.

      If the graphing calculator market had followed the same price/performance curve that personal computers have, we'd have plenty of powerful $10 calculators today.

  2. Re:I hope they succeed. by Cheerio+Boy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I don't see why Negroponte's OLPC project didn't succeed before. I can buy a netbook on Newegg for 250$... yet a laptop with a quarter of the power and less functionality can't be built for less than 200$ for the OLPC.

    It didn't succeed because Negroponte wouldn't let anyone who wanted one buy it. It's that simple. Had he done that he would have sold enough of them to get them into the field and had money to continue development and produce them faster.

    So what stopped Negroponte was....Negroponte.

    --

    "Bah!" - Dogbert
  3. Re:Imagine... by PopeRatzo · · Score: 4, Insightful

    But does it run Vista?

    For $10, they can't even afford to put the Vista sticker on these things.

    Which, by the way, is a plus. I just bought my daughter a new laptop, and they put more stickers on that thing than Dale Jr's NASCAR ride.

    The really nasty thing is that not all of the stickers come off, either. A couple of them I was able to remove cleanly, but the one advertising the processor, and of course the "Vista fer Sure!" sticker seemed pretty immutable.

    Hell fire, I'll take half a dozen of those sawbuck laptops right now if they just leave the friggin' stickers off.

    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.
  4. Re:I hope they succeed. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Simple. I, as a consumer in the U.S., couldn't simply buy one. I had to use the Buy-one, Give-one program. A much better program would be to let anyone buy them, in any amount without doubling the price. If it was a hit in the retail market, the price would have come down.

    It failed before it started.

  5. Re:I hope they succeed. by Cheerio+Boy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The G1G1 _doubled_ the price of the laptop for a lone purchaser thus putting it closer to the range of a standard cheap notebook for the average purchaser. This alone was enough to push people away from purchasing it for their own use.

    If he had just let people buy them in single units for the stated original cost he would have considerably more money to produce more units and would have likely hit that one million unit mark much much sooner.

    He also started the G1G1 program only AFTER people complained they couldn't buy one for themselves. Furthermore he STOPPED the program instead of just letting it run and gaining whatever money he could get out of it.

    As for citations do your own damn research - the rest of us have been watching this train wreck since it started.

    --

    "Bah!" - Dogbert
  6. Re:I hope they succeed. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Let me guess, you've never been to India. Sure, there are places that are modern and very livable, but you also have many areas with slum conditions unimaginable in Western Europe and North America.

    Have you ever seen a river of shit and waste with a plank over it leading to someone's home?

  7. Re:Where is China's innovation? by Dunbal · · Score: 5, Insightful

    China does not have innovation. Unlike Japan,

          Perhaps if you were just a little older, you would remember when all Japan could do was copy Western technology. However today Japan can innovate. Give China another 30 years, and then watch out!

    --
    Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
  8. Re:I hope they succeed. by Lumpy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    because you know nothing abotu the OLPC project.

    your netbook is a toy that if dropped once in the sand or mud it will be dead.

    the OLPC is a cheap panasonic toughbook. the OLPC is designed to survive in 3rd world conditions Operate from 0% humidity to 100% humidity in 120 degree heat.

    Your netbook is a child's toy compared to what the OLPC was supposed to be. It's like how the top of the line Alienware or Dell XPS is a complete joke to a Toughbook 30.

    and it's why a toughbook 30 is $5800.00 for lessthan 1/2 the processing power of the Alienware laptop.

    OLPC = toughbook netbook. They cost more plus they dont want to force all cultures to learn english to use it. Unlike all netbooks.

    --
    Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.