Get Ready For The Simputer 255
EccentricAnomaly writes: "CNN is reporting that the Simputer will roll out next month. The Simputer is a handheld computer running GNU/Linux starting at around $214 and is aiming to be an affordable computer for the third world that can be used even by the illiterate with its text-to-speech features. From the Simputer website: "The Simputer is a low cost portable alternative to PCs, by which the benefits of IT can reach the common man." Slashdot ran a story in May 2001 reporting the launch of the Simputer project." The same Reuters story is also found at the Hindustan Times.
great.... (Score:1)
LTTFM!!! (Listen to the f****** manual)
Helping the common man (Score:1)
I mean, people in third world countries will be more bothered about where their next meal is coming from than browsing their email or reading Slashdot.
Re:Helping the common man (Score:1)
Re:Helping the common man (Score:1)
dummass... they use computers in 3rd world countries.
I know this is terribly Politically Incorrect but (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:I know this is terribly Politically Incorrect b (Score:1)
Re:I know this is terribly Politically Incorrect b (Score:2)
Probably because the "Can't read? Call 1-800-ABC-DEFG" campaign wasn't working.
(true story, there really were billboards that said that.)
Re:I know this is terribly Politically Incorrect b (Score:2)
Re:I know this is terribly Politically Incorrect b (Score:1)
Re:I know this is terribly Politically Incorrect b (Score:3)
Kids and computers: a natural combo (Score:2)
It seems like children have the natural curiosity needed to figure out complex machines like computers. The befuddled Dad who asks Junior to teach him how to use his computer has become a cliche.
I just want one of these Simputers. You can bet that as well as Hindi and Pali and Urdu and a few other dialects that the Simputer understands English. English is sort of the second language in India. Voice recognition that works? In a cute little package? I'm there, man.
Re:I know this is terribly Politically Incorrect b (Score:1)
When you're child is dying before your eyes from lack of food or medicine I'm sure that a simputer will come in handy. Afterall, you could always trade it for food or medicine - at $200 a pop it should be worth a least a bag a rice and some multi vitamins.
Re:I know this is terribly Politically Incorrect b (Score:2)
Re:I know this is terribly Politically Incorrect b (Score:1)
I have been to a number of 3rd world countries throughout my life. In my experience, of 1,000 of these handed out in a given area, 100 will be broken in the 1st month, 800 will be resold for cash, and the last hundred will end up with people that actually use them (and keep them away from everyone else).
Wow, what are the odds that this will get mod'ed down?
Re:I know this is terribly Politically Incorrect b (Score:2)
Teach a man to fish and he will sit next to a river and drink beer all day.
Re:I know this is terribly Politically Incorrect b (Score:3, Funny)
ME: Choose the option "I want to setup my connection manually".
HER: It's not there.
ME: Check again, I'm sure it's there.
HER: No, it's not here.
ME: Ok, read me the options you have.
HER: [option 1], [option 2], "Setup my connection manually". Ok, I found it.
I'm sorry but it's a waste of resources when you allow people to be as ignorant as they want.
Re:I know this is terribly Politically Incorrect b (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:I know this is terribly Politically Incorrect b (Score:4, Informative)
And I'm really surprised everytime I read people saying "oh why would a third world country bring a [product/service] etc when they can't even feed their citizens". Sometimes it is best to help the people indirectly like bringing in a tool to help them learn and bringing new computer technology is the best way to do it.
India is the fourth largest economy [rediff.com] in the world. This product is geared towards the the middle to upper class of the populace whose spending power is growing. And they are obviously educated. So this would make a good idea to bring a linux powered pda to the market.
Re:I know this is terribly Politically Incorrect b (Score:4, Insightful)
relevant speech recognition links (Score:2, Informative)
Do-it-yourself speech recognition-based reading instruction [bovik.org]
CMU Sphinx [sourceforge.net]
comp.speech.research [google.com]
Cambridge Hidden Markov Model Toolkit [cam.ac.uk] (speech data not included)
Best wishes,
James
Re:I know this is terribly Politically Incorrect b (Score:2)
Just a thought...
easy (Score:2)
From the Faq! (Score:1, Funny)
A: You must be a
Bizarre claim about Simputer... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Bizarre claim about Simputer... (Score:1)
So it is a step forward -- but technology is only useful as you pointed out if you're standard of living is above the poverty line
Re:Bizarre claim about Simputer... (Score:5, Interesting)
It appears to me that this is the model the Simputer people are looking toward. They sell these gadgets (probably with financing) to one family per village, and it lets your whole village communicate with the village 100 miles up the road, probably more cheaply than the cell phone (you don't have to wait for the guy who owns the phone to ride his goat over out to the farm you are calling to talk to your business partner).
So, the price isn't that different from the costs associated with a citizen of the US starting his/her own business. It could cost $30,000-100,000 to start up a bar or restaurant, or car repair shop, a small farm, or many other retail businesses.
Of course, I've never been to India, so maybe someone from there can fill in the details.
Weird market orientation (Score:3, Insightful)
If the Simputer is supposed to be shared by villagers, I will suggest them to buy a cheap PC instead. Sharing a PC is much easier than sharing a PDA size device (more expandable, easier to service, not that easy to get stolen or squashed by a careless user...). According to Price Watch, a completed Duron 750MHz system with 128MB RAM, 20GBHDD, CD/modem/ethernet/video/keyboard/mouse/MS tax costs US$255. Adding a 14-15 inch monitor, the price is still around $350, on par with the Simputer ($214 to $469).
If you really think the handheld form factor is important, get this Linux PDA [slashdot.org] for US$160.
Re:Weird market orientation (Score:2)
Re:Weird market orientation (Score:2)
Power supply voltage (110 vs 220 V, 50 vs 60Hz) is not at all a problem, any manufacturer can supply both spec. If an organisation like simputer.org can figure out how to design a PDA, I don't think they will have any trouble sort these out when ordering parts.
Re:Weird market orientation (Score:2)
Re:Weird market orientation (Score:2)
Tariff [eetimes.com] is a big deal in India. For example, cabling materials are taxed at 35 %. It probably concludes the whole situation.
Re:Weird market orientation (Score:2)
The simputer can easily have its batteries swapped out and recharged elsewhere. Also it is probably a lot more durable than a normal computer / PDA, include custom software, so it costs more.
Re:Bizarre claim about Simputer... (Score:5, Insightful)
Contrary to popular belief, there is a very very significant tech-savvy population of farmers and others in India.
I think it would be great if they could get information regarding the weather, crops, harvest and the like in a much more accessible forms. Right now, there are counters and phone centers who answer such queries for them, if the simputer could make their task easier, then what's the problem? The returns would be way higher.
And some poster had commented about illiteracy, that an illterate populace does not need such stuff. You know, you do not weed out illiteracy by saying, "Hey! You don't deserve this coz you don't read." You try and motivate people. And by the way, who the hell gave you this crap that most Indians are illiterate? In the southern state of Kerala, there's more than 99% literacy. There are a lot of states and union territories which boast of 90%+ literacy.
And literacy for us is a very different thing altogether, a lot of the so called illiterate people do math, but can't write and read. Why? Because that's the way the culture and the society is. A guy running a family businesss here just knows what he needs to, nothing more nothing less. Just that they've not had the opportunity to exploit their capabilities does not mean that they should not be.
And besides, I'm sure that the govt. would introduce subsidies and banks would gladly give loans to the needy. Already a lot of subsidies with really reduced interest rates exist for small scale industries by banks with both public and private holdings. With enough help from the govt. Simputer could be really made available to the masses. More than a geek or hacker to fiddle with, this could mean a whole lot more to a farmer or a fisherman to know the status of the weather and the crop. Think about it.
Re:Bizarre claim about Simputer... (Score:2)
-Sokie
Re:Bizarre claim about Simputer... (Score:3, Insightful)
Storage cards and lots cheaper than the unit.
Sort of like library computers and solid-state floppy disks for users.
And for the fool who is getting ready to scream about viruses -- the Simputer is flash based, so you power it off/on and it resets to a virgin (non-virus) state before inserting a card.
Computers in the ghetto... (Score:2)
Panorama City is still kinda rough, and it's largely Latino. However, parents here scrimp and save to send their kids to Parochial school, and now they scrimp and save to buy their kids their own computers. It's the classic story...they want their kids to have a better life than they do.
About 3 years ago I started to see it: bus benches with the legend in Spanish, "Computadoras, credito facil." What does that mean? Computers on easy credit. It was then that I realized that the computer had gone from being a business tool and a hobby for the idle rich to being a device on the way to becoming as ubiquitous in households as the TV and the telephone.
How many poor families have you seen who still have a TV and a telephone? Prolly most of them. How many of these also have a game console? Probably the majority of the TV/Telephone owners. The computer is next on the horizon. 5 years from now computers will be ubiquitous even in poor homes.
They sure picked a great name. (Score:3, Funny)
Simputer: That does not simpute. Simputer will return after deciding your punishment
You are SOOOO close (Score:2)
put yes FEMputer was the first thing I thought of. :)
Re:You are SOOOO close (Score:2)
Monkeyman334 [slashdot.org]
Monkelectric [slashdot.org]
Android's Dungeon & Baseball Card Shop [snpp.com] closed a little early tonight, didn't it?
Remember: Preview is your friend.
Re:You are SOOOO close (Score:2)
thanks for pointing that out ...
Re:They sure picked a great name. (Score:2, Funny)
Actually, the first thing that came to my mind was a new Maxis game...
Computers for who? (Score:3, Insightful)
Does the thing come standard with a solar battary charger and a satellite dish to connect to the Internet? Most of these people don't have reliable electricity, never mind a reliable data connection. And what good will such a device do if they can't connect to the 'net to learn things. They'll just have a fragile piece of equipment to which they can transcribe their existing database (books and papers).
They have a nice idea, but I just don't see it working in the environment they target.
Re:Computers for who? (Score:2)
Re:Computers for who? (Score:1)
Re:Computers for who? (Score:2)
Re:Computers for who? (Score:1)
Re:Computers for who? (Score:2)
Furthermore, at $214 it seems to me that it would make more sense for the target nations to import a bunch of discontinued and/or reconditioned laptops, e.g. old 486 models, or even those old B/W MS HPCs you can occasionally find on sale at discount places.
Re:Computers for who? (Score:1)
And this is why "the poor," (also known as "these people") once Western Liberal Experts get their hands on them, remain "the poor," and why Western Liberal Experts find they have such limitless opportunities to Do Good.
To the Western Liberal Expert, "the poor" is not an aggregation of men, women, boys, and girls of varying tastes, abilities, and interests. "The poor" is not composed of humans at all. It is a substance, a homogeneous paste-like goo such as might come out of a tube of toothpaste.
Experts such as quoted here would measure out, say, 70 kg of "the poor," and tell us that a 70 kg barrel of poverty requires three-quarters (0.75) cow or culturally-suitable livestock in undivided share; half a kilo (0.5 kg) grain per week grain fresh-issue, and one-quarter (0.25) share in stock-drawn plow of suitable manufacture and dimension. Every barrel of Poor Person is identical, so every barrel has the same needs.
Dufus.
It turns out that one of the development programs that actually works is microcredit: You do not barge into a place with an eye to rationing everybody into lockstep subsistence agriculture. You offer loans of, like $10 or $100.
In the early '90s, women in parts of the Third World found a good measure of independence and prosperity by raising money of their own, borrowing the rest, and getting a cellular phone: They then go into business renting out the use of the phone. Peanuts to you, but the community (as well as the borrower) has a gain in wealth, and in the habits of making wealth, above what could be had from sinking the money into More Subsistence Rationing.
So, yes. I could see somebody sinking a life's savings, or a family's life savings, into something that could put half a village over the hump into an above-subsistence economy, if they had a real cheap computer to do it with. Sneer all you want, white boy.
Re:Computers for who? (Score:2)
Saying that the people in the third world are poor simply because they don't have monetary resources equal to that of your average American is just plain ignorant. It is completely feasable to order a society around an economic system other than the US dollar or currency in general. In fact most of the third world countries have been doing it for millenia, it's called bartering and community property. Common currency allows for easier trade across a larger area, once a common value of a product has been settled upon.
I never suggested hand outs, substinance rationing or anything of the like. I merely suggested that in a third world society there are probably things more impotant than an electronic device for which there is likely no infrastructure and for which there is a high risk of loss of the device due to damage without any means of local/self repair.
The cow, grain, and plow I suggested are all self sustaining, profitable items both to the individual and the community in both monetary and sociological ways. A cow provides calfs, milk, blood, and at some point meat (well, except in India). Grain can be planted to grow more grain and then harvested for building materials, food, fuel and more grain seed. The crop waste can be tilled back in to the soil with the plow to naturally fertilize the fields for the next crop.
You see... my suggestion was that there are more practical things that these people could spend money on that would have a more direct and longer lasting effect on the person and the community. My suggestions require no futher costly infrastructure to achieve benefit. A very poor community could indeed purchase such a hand-held computer. Then they need to purchase batteries, smart cards, and the information (or bandwidth to access it) to make the device useful, never mind the inevitable repair and replacement cost of the device itself. If education is the goal, a lower technology format of books would probably be a better choice. Giving a computer to a community that doesn't have access to a library seems to be akin to giving a 6 year old a Ferrari. Sure the high Ferarri is the 'best' form of personal transortation, but the kid can't ride a bike yet. Think about how many used encycolpedias, literary works, fictional novels and other used books could be sent to or purchased by these communities for the price of one of these gadgets. My local university surplus outlet, and my local thrift stores (good will, salvation army, etc) all sell used books for anywhere from $.05 to $1.00. Even in my reguar used book store I just picked up a copy of "McGraw-Hill's Concise Encyclopedia of Science & Technology" for $20 (A $400+book). So on average a comminty could purchase 300+ books for $200. Up to 300 people could access that material at any time. With the computer, $200 gets one useless device (smart cards and content are extra $$) that only one person can access at a time.
Which do you choose: the hard or soft option?(wasn't that the Pet Shop boys)
Re:Computers for who? (Score:2)
Actually, a year ago, $200 would have been _very_ reasonable for the 'common man' in south america (I don't know about the rest of the 3rd world). But that was a year ago.. right now $50 would be too much.. they'd rather upgrade the existing (desktop) machines.
Quick somebody call FOX! (Score:1)
When marketing strategies go bad. Seriously though I doubt a handheld machine is neither a good sell or really something that India needs.
Sally Struthers (Score:1, Funny)
"Trade Secret" License (Score:3, Insightful)
It reminds me of Microsoft tying a license to their version of the Kerberos protocol. Although different in intent, the basic legal mechanism, if recognised as valid, is very, very dangerous.
Specs. (Score:1)
for all those questioning its use... (Score:4, Insightful)
Let me tell you one area where it could be useful. Many, many times in the past, there have been growth of some vegetable or fruit, in quantities much larger than usual. Normally this follows a period of scarcity of that item (perhaps due to some disease). Once the farmers see that the price of some particular produce is very high, all of them start growing the same. Note that farm holdings are extremely fragmented in India. So when the harvest comes in, compared to the amount available, there is little demand. Most of the produce just rots on the plant, as it cost of picking the produce is more than the sale price. I have seen this happening many times. Imagine, if you will, an index of areas of cultivation of a particular crop. This would not be too difficult to make, at least on a rough basis, say per village. If all the farmers could see this information, then they could avoid these periods of excesses and scarcities.
The above was just one example where it could be useful. There are some organisations planning wireless internet through buses!!! Every time the bus passes through the village, the people in the village could download information off the bus. So they would get 'up-to-date' information say twice a day. Since long distance phone calls are expensive, emails could and probably would be quite a killer app there.
Even now, there are pilot trials going on where eye doctors, remotely view the patients' eyes with web-cams and recommend medication or ask them to come for further diagnosis/treatment.
In this case, I truly believe that once this becomes popular, there can be very useful applications benefitting the common people.
Not the actual purchase... (Score:1)
What does it do? (Score:2)
However the simputer page is very vague about what the simputer actually does, and why a villager would want one. The page [simputer.org] which purports to describe the role of the Simputer basically states the simputer will bring IT to the masses. Well, yes, but to what end?
Batteries? (Score:1)
Simputer cost. (vs, say, Palm), and applications. (Score:3, Interesting)
Once they get economies of scale going, cost will drop quickly - and in any case the cost of all micro-electronics manufacturing is constantly dropping (except for Apple's LCDs it seems
Plus, we're talking about a one-per-village item, not an individual use device, which is why it takes smart cards. Think of expert systems for microcredit loans, medical diagnosis, first aid, farming and the like - deployed with a voice interface in the back of beyond.
It's early stages yet, but give it time.
It's a thin client, and an overpriced one (Score:1, Troll)
So it's a thin client in the form factor of a palmtop, that can only access content specialized for it. It's not even the cheapest thin client. Why?
Parent not Troll! (Score:2)
Better way to spend the $$ (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Better way to spend the $$ (Score:1)
1) a power supply of 220 or 110 Volts... bah!
2) a display (add some $$$ or lose your eyes)...
3) this would be sooo slow...
Re:Better way to spend the $$ (Score:2)
Old machines require better written software then new ones, that's all
Half a dozen applications for the simputer. (Score:5, Insightful)
Microcredit loans (of a few tens of dollars, repayable by a group rather than an individual) are rapidly turning into a key aid strategy, but finding people to run the schemes and do evaluations for who should get the loans is difficult. A simputer application could help with data and loan application gathering, and keeping track of repayments. You'd essentially run the local microcredit loan office on one, or perhaps have a traveling bank officer.
Have been proven to improve medical diagnosis in trained doctors by respectable margins. Even a simple database with appropriate treatment instructions for, say, the 100 most common ailments in the region the machine is in, plus some first aid, could really make a difference. Particularly if it had a preventative medicine bias.
People do not know what they do not know. A simputer app which contained a basic science and appropriate technology education (concepts like germ theory, designs for things like fuel efficient cooking stoves), which people could query easilly, could be very useful.
Dumb as it may sound. Just wait for the "Help, I'm 9 years old, live in Andhar Pradesh, and my family is starving because the harvest failed again. Please do something" emails to begin.
More seriously, with email, and a little time, we could see things like pairing of western high-schools with third world villages - they have a question, the highschoolers find the answer for them and email it back.
Similarly, trade becomes possible once you have information, financial structures and transport of goods (and, perhaps, rule of law). There are a lot of skilled crafts people in India - wouldn't you like to be able to order custom-made clothes or furniture for a fraction of what it would cost for generica at the Gap or Ikea?
Just amortize the shipping costs (by the container, of course) across a large enough set of trades and this begins to make sense.
One problem in governing places like India, even in the most basic distribution of help to the poor, is inaccurate or incomplete data about what is going on in the field. If we do end up with a simputer per village at some point in the future, and people log events on the box, mining that data stream may tell us how to help ten times more effectively than before.
It may also help the poor organize: PeasantDot.Org - where the rural poor get together to help each other out.
Even if it doesn't, making what we're really good at help the people with nothing makes a lot of sense.
Re:Half a dozen applications for the simputer. (Score:1)
It should have at least the same areas of applicability as PalmPilot.
Re:Half a dozen applications for the simputer. (Score:2)
For the medical app: they can't read.
Perl/Tk? (Score:1)
Why are only two companies licensed to make it? (Score:2)
I also agree that a PDA that costs a year's salary is the last thing a third world person needs. If they want to make a cheap linux box for that market, it should be a small laptop with a keyboard, that runs on D cells (WAY cheaper per unit of energy than AA cells). That's far more useful for important applications like email, and should be cheaper to make because not as much custom hardware is needed.
A new computer from an old place: Interesting (Score:3, Insightful)
It makes me think of Henry Ford rolling out the Model T in the early 20th century. Up until then, automobiles (at least in the US -- I'm not familiar with elsewhere) were marketed to the well-to-do. The Model T was marketed to the ordinary. In fact, one of Ford's goals was that every worker in the Ford factory be able to buy one.
Does that mean everybody in the US could buy a Model T? No, it didn't. But the Model T made automobiles much more accessible than they had been, for both individuals and for businesses.
I will trust that the developers know their own country better than I do, and wish them well. It will be interesting to see what comes of their efforts.
ButWeDontEvenHaveElectricityInAfrica.com (Score:1)
a project from btdoya [blowthedotoutyourass.com]
excuse me? (Score:1)
also, does it help the rain to come down, or for the locusts to stay away? how is this going to be usefull for a people who do not need it?
must we push our ideals onto all other cultures? seems that the ones that are peacefull and without major conflict do not need us paleskins coming in and telling them that they "need" this gadget.
Re:excuse me? (Score:2)
You speak as if these people can' tell the diference between a stone and an expensive, fragile electronic device.
The funny thing is, by exacerbating one stereotype (poor indians must be dumb as bricks), you're only affirming another (Americans are self-centered, egotistical, and rude).
I will buy one of these... (Score:3, Interesting)
Sim puter? (Score:2)
-
Hmm.. How about answers not pessimism? (Score:2, Interesting)
To me this is typical of the
Do I have the answer? Hell no, I'm a moron. But collectivly we could make a difference if the majority took their heads out of their ass and those of their respective life-partners, and started thinking about 'how' things could be achieved instead of saying things are impossible.
NOTHING is impossible.
How about a minor grant of 10K bucks to get these out to 50 villages? Even with no internet access, and an issue with batteries, do you think it'll make a difference to at least one human being? Me, being an optomist, I think it would. And after all, isn't helping 1 person as important as a million?
Per capita income is not a good indicator (Score:3, Insightful)
Don't forget that this item could be considered an investment. A little kid that gets started with one of these could end up a very rich(or at least comfortable) programmer in his/her adult life. India has some really good programmers, which means they have some really smart people that got their hands on a computer.
What will we do with it? (Score:4, Funny)
Does this mean we must r00t it and install Windows?
Re:What will we do with it? (Score:2, Funny)
Educational Applications (Score:2)
Simputer.org FAQ writer has a sense of humor! (Score:2, Funny)
Q: Can I create a Beowulf cluster using many Simputers?
A: You must be a
rotflmao!
The stench of arrogance is stifling (Score:3, Insightful)
Oversensitive? (Score:2)
How would you like it if the "white people" started getting affronted off every time some ignorant from India started claiming that we're all missionaries?
Simputer - a Critique (Score:2, Insightful)
1. simputer at $216 is a very simplistic estimate (it it is not the list price). the $216 is the sum of prices of its parts if bought in bulk. it does not include the cost of assembling, testing, packing, CEO's lifestyle, rent of the office space, etc. By the time you add it all up and pay the taxes, the price could well touch $500. i bet a dollar it wont cost less $400.
2. simputer is a hardware platform that is not very different from ipaq. it uses arm processor, it has all the standard hardware features of a pocket pc. in that case, wouldnt it make sense to port simputer's software to existing hardware platforms that can leverage the economies of their existing scale of production?
3. dont be fooled into thinking that simputer is an open design. to use it, you have to pay them. check their fine print. their software is free, but their hardware design is not. which may explain why they didnt port it to existing pda platforms.
4. there is nothing especially about the simputer hardware than cannot be achieved, lets say, using the $150 handspring pda. then why pay more?
What Cnet neglected to mention (Score:2, Informative)
An african swallow or eruopean swallow? (Score:4, Insightful)
If they think they have a reasonable price for some third world country to buy for schools they are putting themselves on. A pricetag of a "mere" $216 in US dollars is beaucoup cash for some family in the middle of nowhere on a dirt farm. They'd be lucky to sell just one per small village let alone one per person. People would be better off buying anti-biotics or flu shots rather than one of these things.
They get cool points among Linux zealots for even mentioning GNU or Linux but in reality having Linux on it means very little. It's like having Linux on a TiVo, nothing the user interacts with is Linux-y so to the user they aren't using something called Linux. You don't turn on a TiVo and watch a Twilight Zone marathon rerun and think "holy peepants this uses Linux and it is so cool because of that", well sane sociologically adjusted people dont. The Simputer isn't going to win over a bunch of third world Open Source zealots or some stupid shit like that. The software running on the Simputer will be all they really know or care about with regards to the system.
Instead of a stupid idea like the Simputer they should have stuck with something like a Dreamcast. The late edition DCs had a bunch of components packed onto a handful of chips and Sega even had a DC on a chip worked out ready for fabrication. They intended to stick DC guts into DVD players like the Matsushita/Panasonic DVD capable GameCube. They would be much more flexible than some handheld toy that is itching to be dropped or otherwise lost. Plus it could hook up to a television which a place likely to have the ability to plop down $50 for a DC based console ought to have at least one television in town. A number of people could use the thing at once which makes it much more cost effective.
Educational material is easy to ship off to people, a CD or DVD can store instructional material in the form of animated or live action movies for people who can't read. A student's entire lifetime curricula could be stored on a single CD. A class of students could use a single CD-ROM for several years worth of education. Textbooks from elementary to a high school level (or whatever your local equivilent is) could be stored at HTML or PDF files or some other format friendly to your particular language. As for languages, a single disc could contain the same information in multiple formats so a bunch of people speaking different languages or dialects only need to buy a single disc. Using CD-ROMs rather than semiconductor memory cards is scores cheaper and people could afford to not only buy more software but multiple copies in case one ends up ruined.
The goal of the Simputer would be more easily met by a much simpler and cheaper machine. Its creators might have the right mindset but they don't seem to have thought through the implications of the hardware they developed. Even if there was some requirement for a portable device people would be better off putting tough rubber cases on a bunch of Palm m105s or Handspring Visors and handing them out to people.
They know their audience ;) (Score:2)
Q: Can I create a Beowulf cluster using many Simputers?
A: You must be a
Doubts (Score:2)
I personally have my doubts with this device. I personally think that a standard PC with Windows or Linux Speech Input would do the job at the same price for a community of users. Even devices such as a modified iPaq or a Sharp Zaurus would do the trick. I don't know the conditions in India but I do know that induviduals in India and South Africa have started to set up Internet Cafe's etc in poorer areas and there was an artcle on the BBC on one of these places hooking up to a hospital so that the Doctor could do some diagnosis via a web cam.
The thing is that these people have access to electricity and unless you have a device that charges via solar cells, you're going to have problems in poor third world areas. Not only this but I cannot imagine a device that is loaned out to various people lasting very long anywhere (school library books anyone?) and therefore think it really is a better idea to have the device centrally located in a village where it will also fit in better with a villages social customs instead of enforcing firstworld social isolation on the people.
However this thing could go anyway. The level of corruption in industry could ensure that it get's implemented in India on a national level, but nowhere else, just as has happened in South Africa, my own homeland.
Reminds me of the Minitel (Score:2, Insightful)
This beasts were before the internet really got off very successful in France, although they were just some terminals with a built in modem. But french telecom gave them away for FREE. So if they want to have some digital revolution in india for the masses, just follow this idea. Give those simputers away for free!
The only unsolved problem is: Is there a phone jack in every indian household?
I would suggest this: Free Wireless access points in india, where owners of the simputer can access the internet.
Move the decimal point (Score:2)
Article about illiterate slum kids and computers (Score:2)
Re:insulting product name? (Score:1)
it seems you might be needing a dum-puter for yourself -- just joking
windows was hailed as the next step in computing because it introduced the point and click -- it was simple enough for the average joe to figure out -- but since its simple doesn't mean the average joe is dumb -- and if you believe that
Actually, they DID say it...I shit you not. (Score:3, Funny)
# Q: Can I create a Beowulf cluster using many Simputers?
A: You must be a
W
Re:If it didn't run Linux... (Score:2)
> Linux the headline/summary/comment on the front
> page would have been dripping with sarcasm,
> contempt and ridicule.
This site, from what I have seen over the last several years, appears to support and encourage the use of free or open software, and the free dissemination of information about technical products.
There are other websites, like those of Microsoft and Apple, that support and encourage other ideologies.
How long have you been reading slashdot, anyway? Cmdr. Taco has always been a fairly ardent supporter of oensource and engineering...and it's his site.
Re:If it didn't run Linux... (Score:2)
And since you asked I've been here a while though not as long as some. I've posted 125 comments and judging by my karma I'd say that the community here finds them useful.
Re:If it didn't run Linux... (Score:2)
If this piece of hardware didn't happen to run Linux the headline/summary/comment on the front page would have been dripping with sarcasm, contempt and ridicule.
And the problem with that is....????? All kidding aside, I don't think you can say that with certainty. Read on, oh Large, Green and Ugly One...
Don't get me wrong, it would be well deserved IMO, but I'm just saying... because it's a Linux story, it was put up with the straightest of faces. That's slashdot for ya. Go figure.
If you read the story, you'll find out the the devices OS is totally secondary to the main idea of the story - distributing technology to the poor and disadvantaged. That's the reason for the straight face. Besides, I'm sure that if it were BSD based it would get the same treatment.
Develop an idea that doesn't involve open source software that has even one significant flaw and it's "lame." Develop a stupid joke of an idea that runs linux and it's "pretty cool!"
Wrong. The pretty cool idea is there is now an in-expensive device that almost anyone in a poor country can afford to buy and use.
Besides, there are few publications that don't show thier political bias from time to time. A smart person learns to sepaprate opinion from fact.
This thing is stupid by the way. Completely idiotic. I actually thought it was some kind of joke at first.
It's no joke, my friend. Get used to it. This little tablet can be a useful device to someone who's never seen a computer before. It just takes imagination, innitiative and innovation - and from the people I've met that came to Canada from India those three things are in very plentiful supply over there.
BTW, there are several reasons that it was smart to choose Linux as the OS. The most prominent is that everyone who gets one of these can read the code and then learn and understand how thier device actually works. Another is the fact that no-one can hi-jack this initiative for thier own gain.
Let's say it was BSD based, and Company A created a "compatible" device with a few quirks in thier now closed OS. They under sell the free (as in speech) project and corner the market. Now, India's poor are "cash cows" to Company A if they want any of the benefits that thier technology can bring. With Linux, that is far less likely to happen, since any one who wants to start milking the cash cow must engineer thier own compatible OS in clean room conditions, which will drive up the price of the competing devices. The Linux OS still wins, stays free and the project continues on it's intended purpose - giving technology to the dis-adavntaged.
OK, Mr. Troll, you've been fed. Off with you now - back under your rock.
Anyone else realise that if this takes off, Linux market share will skyrocket? I could write a (wellll, another) sizeable novel on the implications of that. Yee haa, we're going to have some fun now!
It's times like this that remind me why I love technology!!!
Soko
Re:If it didn't run Linux... (Score:2)
My criticism isn't of the story, but rather of the blurb on the front page of slashdot, which I think I made clear. And I did of cours read the article.
Besides, I'm sure that if it were BSD based it would get the same treatment
BSD is open source. Re-write your sentence and replace "BSD" with, say, "Windows" and see if you still agree with it.
Besides, there are few publications that don't show thier political bias from time to time. A smart person learns to sepaprate opinion from fact.
A smart person does indeed do this. But I think Slashdot is beyond the pale when it comes to the OSS/Linux issue. The often unthnking bias towards open source software is the most significant flaw of an otherwise outstanding community web site.
This little tablet can be a useful device to someone who's never seen a computer before.
If you mean it'll revolutionize the world the way the Segway did, then sure. Heh. I hope you'll forgive my - how shall I put this politely? - "wait and see" attitude.
BTW, there are several reasons that it was smart to choose Linux as the OS.
No argument there. I can think of several. Price probably being the most significant. Odd that you don't mention it. But whether it was smart to do Linux or not isn't at all my point.
OK, Mr. Troll, you've been fed. Off with you now - back under your rock.
I'm sure it's comforting to think that I'm some kind of habitual provocotuer who goes around insulting people in online discussion forums just to get noticed. I mean it couldn't be that I am actually a mature, considerate, well-behaved online citizen who's slashdot karma refelcts how valued his comments are...could it? A "troll" you can ignore. A reasonable person with a valid point deserves your consideration. I, sir, am the latter.
Anyone else realise that if this takes off, Linux market share will skyrocket?
That would be very cool indeed. But I don't think this is the device that's going to do it for Linux. Frankly I think the thing holding Linux back on the desktop is it's developers. They don't want to see the kind of Linux that "mom and pop" want. Perhaps - just perhaps - someone will make a Linux distro that is truly suitable for consumers. I predict that if/when that day comes, that distro will be universally hated by the existing Linux community.
Re:If it didn't run Linux... (Score:2)
Re:If it didn't run Linux... (Score:2)
if you plug "better and free" into a model of our economic system, you either quickly achieve 100% market penetration
That's how I would figure it also. The problem I'm having though is trying to explain why Linux has such insignificant marketshare in the desktop arena. Clearly it is free. I think the ugly truth of the matter is that it's not better. At least not to desktop os users.
OffTopic: Complex? (Score:2)