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May 4, 2007 11:33 AM PDT

India aims for $10 laptop

by Michael Kanellos

It sounds too good to be true, but the Human Resources Development ministry in India is trying to get engineers to devise a $10 laptop.

So far, the ministry is looking at two different designs: one from an engineering student at the Vellore Institute of Technology and another from the Indian Institute of Science in Bangalore, according to the Times of India. (The Institute of Science, by the way, is not the colleges that are part of the Indian Institute of Technology. The Institute of Science is a grad school. Out of over 100,000 annual applications, it takes about 350.)

So far, one of the laptops, even after factoring in labor charges, costs about $47.

The cost is encouraging and we are hopeful it would come down to $10. We would also look into the possibility of some Indian company manufacturing the parts,? an official said.

Even though labor is cheap in India, getting a laptop to this level will be tough. A laptop is made from components, after all, which have to be made in factories. The $100 laptop from Nicholas Negroponte has ballooned up to $175. These laptops will be made on a single board. And most likely, it will be made with old, discarded component. You and I may not want them, but a lot of old components are pretty good. A 1GHz processor is considered out-of-date these days.

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On track
by vasanisalim May 4, 2007 12:06 PM PDT
This might sound over ambituous but even a $47 Laptop is a feat. Indian Government is setting a high target at $10 and it might never happen but the good thing is that this has atleast got the thinking process started and we are already receiving creative ideas. Any large scale progress on this will benefit not only India (which is already pretty tech savvy) but also a lot of upcoming European, South American and African markets.
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India - Tech Savvy ?
by YankeePoodle May 4, 2007 3:44 PM PDT
Hanging out will cell-phones and crowding up web-surfing centers is not tech savvy. Unfortunately, lot of busts make Indian news for e.g. Simputer, whatever happened to it and ton other things that would change world forever on paper, but never deliver in mass market or niche market.

In India's case, I will believe only when I see it. Not when things are on drawing boards or in clay models, $10 laptop and $2200 car.

I understand one should aim for higher, but again if you put funding or decision making in Indian governments hand, you will get reams of red-tape in return on which you can travel to sun twice.

BTW, lets talk about Richard Gere :D
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