Negroponte Offers OLPC Technology For India's $35 Tablet
angry tapir writes "One Laptop Per Child wants to join forces to help develop the Indian government's planned $35 tablet. In a congratulatory note to the government, OLPC Chairman Nicholas Negroponte said the world needs the $35 tablet, and he offered the country full access to OLPC hardware and software technology."
It seems obvious how this might point the Indian project in the right direction, but will OLPC be able to learn anything form involvement in the ultracheap Indian effort?
Joint ventures FTW!
I listen to both RIAA and non-RIAA stuff if I like the music, tangential business/politics nonwithstanding.
India is trolling - it can announce $35 tablets, even $0.00 tablets, but it sure as hell can't make any for that price. The components alone cost more than $35, and that's when China makes them with slaves paid less than India will pay.
Negroponte has been there, knows the truth, and knows that India is just there to swindle international news media to get attention for its own country. He's going to co-opt that attention for his own project. Good on him.
Does my bum look big in this?
Which is exactly why they should not have bowed to ms demands in the first place. Ms and intel were never serious but tecognised that co-opting is a great way to kill a project like this. Olpc is already sleepwalking to failure, as evidenced by the size of its dev crew and real world deployments. It died because they were too busy grandstanding and announcing vapourware and partnerships to make something cheap, useful and ubiquitous. Android is already further along than olpc will ever be, and partnering with negroponte would be the kiss of death for any Indian project. Why do they need negroponte when great software is available for free and they have a huge supply of programmers?
A touchscreen device for $35 would be great, but it is not close to reality- the Indian government, who have the money and manpower to really make a difference (unlike olpc), should take that lesson to heart and change the world rather than waste time promising the impossible. They can make it cheap and ubiquitous and truly useful (though limited) or expensive and full-featured and end up competing with all the commercial solutions out there and constantly sabotaged and undermined by companies like ms and intel. I know which I would choose.
Does India have any tech manufacturing base? No troll - sincere question.
I know they've got keen engineering students who want that base to develop so they can work in it, but I can't think of any factories. Everything's in China, isn't it? In which case this is a pipe-dream promotion by the prof. It'll get friendly words from various Goverment officials trying to sound like they want to do things for education and manufacturing, but it won't get funding like the Space program does. (Space programs are relatively easy to fund -- national vanity projects aren't judged by meeting commodity pricing.)
Which leaves the remaining indian tech I can think of, which tend to be licensed military contracts that suffer bad cost-overruns and delays. The Tata's isn't a good example because its only innovation is stripped-out performance and safety requirements. It's a fine and useful thing, but it's not an example of technical industry any more than the Trabant was. You can apply the same principle of Vicious Compromise to digital school tablet, but that won't deliver something cheaper than its Chinese parts.
*ahem* The Nano would be a Tata product, and Tata is a private company. It's like blaming Obama for the iPhone's antenna...
And the point of the $35 device is not making money. It's a given that it'll lose money, since it's subsidized. The idea is to use it for education, and the government is willing to spend on that.
Now, whether it'll actually be useful or not is a different question entirely.
2001:
``A group of Indian scientists and engineers has developed a handheld computer to help the poor and illiterate join the information age.''
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/1442000.stm
2010:
``Both licensees may seem to have stopped actively marketing their Simputer devices''
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simputer
Sphinx of black quartz, judge my vow.
no, the $100 laptop ended up costing $180 but simpletons like to round up to $800. And if you really wanted to use that "logic" then the joke would be, The $35 tablet will end up costing $100.
FYI, the OLPC jokes are sore spots for many because of how Microsoft and Intel came in and destroyed the customer base for the project with false claims of better products which never existed. It took over a year for the great software company called Microsoft to get Windows XP booting on the XO. But that's about all it could do unless the OLPC doubled the RAM and doubled the CPU. You know, like how the original EeePC hardware ended up all jacked up along with the price after Microsoft paid ASUS those nice marketing kick backs to use Windows XP instead of Linux/OSS.
$35 for a tablet is pretty outrageously cheap and very unlikely. Even a $100 tablet sounds too cheap except when you think of how many millions India could build and distribute. Just like how the original OLPC/$100 laptop project was stated as such with minimum order size of a million units and at least a few countries willing to sign up. Isn't the Kindle now priced at $139? It's all about scale but watch out, because when you talk this kind of scale, Microsoft will come in and want to destroy it unless it's using Windows.
Maybe India is just looking for another tens or hundreds of millions from Microsoft to not doing a cheap Linux based device. Isn't this what happened in Thailand a decade or so ago. I remember HP sold out of those cheap laptops and the Thai government stated to sign up Dell to help cover the demand. Then came Microsoft with some kind of deal and the laptops ended up costing more and got Windows instead of Linux. Too bad US school systems to use this tactic since so many are in dire need of cash these days.
LoB
"Anyone who stands out in the middle of a road looks like roadkill to me." --Linus