Indian HP products unveiled / 4-year-old
lab designs keyboard for use in Hindi
The San Francisco Chronicle
April 07, 2006
Four years after Hewlett-Packard set up
a major research laboratory in India, the Palo Alto company
unveiled some of the products Thursday that are aimed at
what the company calls its "next billion customers."
For instance, Indian scientists showed
a special keyboard that can read hand movements enabling
the user to write in Hindi. The keyboard, which was made
available two weeks ago, could help millions of Indians
who are unable to take advantage of the Internet because
personal computers are based mainly in English.
"We're working on things that will
be in the market three to five years ahead," said senior
research scientist R. Krishnan, at a demonstration at HP
Labs in Palo Alto. "It's geared toward the next billion
customers in India and China."
The computing giant set up HP Labs India
in 2002 to come up with products that would appeal to emerging
markets, mainly in India and China, where poverty, cultural
barriers and other issues still restrict people's access
to information technology. Located in the nation's tech
capital of Bangalore, HP Labs India has a staff of 50, including
contract researchers. The company has about 19,000 employees
in India.
India has 14 major languages and many dialects,
and although 68 million people there speak English, less
than 10 percent can conduct business in that language, said
Ajay Gupta, HP Labs India's director.
The gesture-based keyboard works with a
special pen to allow non- English speakers to surf the Web
and even create digital documents.
HP Labs India has also developed a tablet
for filling out paper forms that can send data directly
to a computer. The device, which is still being tested,
would eliminate a common problem in India and other developing
countries where paper forms need to be retyped onto the
network.
HP scientists also hope to tap into the
600 million Indian television viewers with a system that
would allow them to print out materials from the TV.
Gupta said the technology, which is being
field tested, can be used for classroom instruction or for
public education programs for health and civic issues.
For example, a class watching a TV broadcast
of a course would also be able to print out related study
guides.
HP Labs India has also come up with technology
to verify paper documents with the help of barcode and scanning
technologies. Gupta said the technology, which is being
tested, would make it easier for Indians who have to fill
out specific forms for a variety of transactions, such as
applying for loans or for jobs.
HP Labs Director Dick Lampman said the
company hopes its research efforts in India would allow
it to see "beyond the roadmap."
"If you're in the technology business,
you better be thinking of what's next, because the ball
keeps moving," he said.
By Benjamin Pimentel
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