Indians 'want hi-tech
products'
BBC News
April 17, 2006
Technology companies in the West should
stop thinking about India as a place to dump cut-price,
low-tech versions of their products, a senior Indian researcher
has said.
Ajay Gupta, who heads the Indian labs of
Hewlett Packard, said it was a myth that Indians wanted
cheap goods.
During a visit to the computer giant's
UK headquarters, he urged companies hoping to boost computer
use in India to offer innovative solutions and value.
Mr Gupta's comments came two weeks after
chip maker Intel announced a computer specifically for the
Indian market.
The Intel Community PC is built to withstand
the dust and humidity of many parts of India as well as
the sometimes erratic power supply that can damage standard
computers.
It runs on open-source software and costs
just over £300 ($525).
Intel hopes that the machine will help
rural Indians gain a level footing with their urban counterparts
and allow PCs to be used in areas where it was previously
impossible.
Stumbling blocks
Large companies like Intel and Hewlett Packard see India
as a potentially huge market for their products.
The country is becoming younger and more
affluent. But just 5% of the population is computer literate,
meaning there are nearly one billion people in the country
untouched by the digital age.
The barrier to increasing computer use
is not as simple as just reducing the cost, according to
Mr Gupta.
For example, there is only one PC owner
for every four people with a television, he says, despite
some colour sets costing much more than a low-spec computer.
"Today, a television in India costs
about £200 ($350) and you can get a PC for about £150
($263)," said Mr Gupta. "But people know what
to do with a television and not with a PC."
In India's increasingly affluent society,
one of the main stumbling blocks is language.
Many people are put off using computers
because of the difficulty of using standard Qwerty-style
keyboards with Indic languages, of which there are more
than 18.
Hindi has 36 consonants that can be modified
to make 1,500 separate syllables. Typing in just one may
take two or three key strokes on a keyboard originally designed
for the English language.
Pen gestures
Hewlett Packard is hoping to change this
with a new keyboard designed to bridge the divide.
The Gesture Keyboard (GSK), developed at
the company's Bangalore research laboratories, has just
gone on sale in India.
It consists of a pen and a touch-sensitive
pad that allows users to select from a grid of consonants
and then modify them quickly with a pen stroke. The two
combine to form a syllable, significantly speeding-up the
process of writing in an Indic script.
"For anyone who knows how to write
on paper, it takes just 15 to 20 minutes to learn the gesture
keyboard," said Shekhar Borgaonkar, one of the researchers
behind the device.
"For all of the Indic languages, this
will be the only keyboard needed to enter data into computers,"
he said.
The keyboard can be used to write Hindi,
Marathi and Kannada, spoken by more than 400 million people.
It costs just over £30 ($53) and can be used by any
machine running Windows or Linux.
If the GSK takes off it could replace standard
keyboards across Asia and give people access to computing
technology increasingly needed to participate in the modern
world.
Green machine
So far, efforts to bridge the digital divide
have largely focused on reducing the cost and complexity
of computers.
Last year, an Indian company launched the
Simputer, a handheld device designed specifically for the
Indian market, which failed to make much of an impact.
Other offerings include the one laptop
per child scheme showcased in 2005 by MIT's Nicholas Negroponte
at the UN internet summit in Tunis.
The bright green laptops are powered with
a wind-up crank, have very low power consumption and will
let children interact with each other while learning.
Mr Negroponte plans to have millions of
$100 machines in production by 2007.
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