HP Labs India shows off tech goodies
CNET
April 06, 2006
PALO ALTO, Calif.--What do subcompact cars
and PCs have in common?
Forty million people in India. At least
that's Hewlett-Packard's perspective. Company executives
say the 40 million consumers in India who can afford a subcompact
car will be the future buyers of new HP technologies that
make computing easier and less expensive.
On a special trip to the states, the 3-year-old
HP Labs India team demonstrated five of its innovations
here Thursday at Hewlett-Packard's R&D headquarters.
"This opens up the lid" to more
PC literacy in India, Ajay Gupta, lab director for HP Labs
India, said, referring to a technology on display called
a Gesture Board.
The demonstration comes shortly after HP
disbanded a group dedicated to creating technology for emerging
nations such as India, China and Africa. In these regions,
the penetration of PCs and other IT technologies is low,
but the potential demand is high.
Despite the dissolution of the group, called
the Emerging Markets Solutions Group, HP turned its eye
to labs to develop products for these markets.
One of the biggest barriers to tech adoption
in India is language. While many people in India speak English,
less than 10 percent of the population can transact or write
in English and only 50 million are PC literate, according
to HP executives.
So the labs team, which is comprised of
roughly 15 engineers, developed a special keyboard to cater
to the 14 different national languages of India. (Right
now, the product only specializes in two languages--Hindi
and Kannada, the state language--but the company said it
will develop for all the dialects.)
Called the Gesture Keyboard (GKB), the
keyboard uses handwriting recognition software to let users
write with a pen, which can also change from writing mode
to mouse mode. The keyboard digitizes gestures made to consonants
on the keyboard, separating base consonants from phonetic
modifiers. Users can write on the keyboard the way they
learned to as a child, and for this reason, training time
on the board takes only 10 minutes, according to Gupta.
The product launched two weeks ago in India
and sells for about $50. Gupta said he believes this technology
will lower the barriers for many people to get access to
the vast amount of data online that the government and universities
have contributed.
Right now in the country, only 15 million
people have access to the Internet, as opposed to the 600
million with access to TVs.
Aiming to bridge this gap farther, HP Labs
developed Printcast, a technology for porting encoded content
files alongside broadcasts so that viewers can print material
they've seen on TV. Many kids and adults get an education
through distance learning TV programs developed by the government,
and HP's Printcast would allow teachers, homemakers or community
organizations to print supplemental transcripts of TV programs.
The technology, which is in field trials
in India, embeds content into an MPEG 2 file, which is delivered
to a device that can unwrap the data and send it to an attached
printer.
Another novel technology was HP's Coffei,
which is an internal name for its Pen-based Interface for
Filling Out Forms. The technology is designed to do away
with the process of a human being inputting data from printed
forms. (India processes about 150 billion forms annually.)
The device essentially looks like a high-tech
clipboard, with real paper forms attached. The $100 device
recognizes the motions of a special pen, tracking it as
it moves and taking in a stream of data. That data is stored
on the device, which can hold information on up to 100 forms.
Once the device is docked, the information is uploaded into
HP's backend software.
Field trials on the technology, which is
not yet commercially available, are set to be completed
in the coming weeks, according to HP. The company envisions
the device to be useful for anyone from the village school
teacher to a railway ticker seller.
Other technologies from HP Labs India included
Educenter, a digital library compiled through the broadcast-channel
files on educational programming that the company is already
working on. For the Educenter, the labs are working with
the open-source software developed by DSpace, a digital
library project between HP and MIT.
A solution for secure digital documents
was also on tap Thursday. The company developed a paper
scanner and software that can encode the text of a document
into a six-square-inch, 2D barcode, which can't be tampered
with on the paper. Would-be readers need special decryption
software to uncover the original text.
Still, these products are only a fraction
of HP's budget.
HP spends about $3.5 billion on research
and development annually, according to Dick Lampman, senior
vice president of research for HP Labs. Five percent of
that amount is allotted to research on products that "look
to the future," he said.
"If you're in tech, you better be
looking ahead, because the ball keeps moving," said
Lampmann.
By Stefanie Olsen
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