Thursday, May 30, 2013

153 - 1.5 lakh students in rural Punjab to get Aakash tablets - Hindu Business line



Aakash Tablet Computer, in New Delhi. 
File Photo:Sushil Kumar Verma.

AMRITSAR, MAY 29:  

1.5 lakh students in rural areas would be provided with Aakash tablets from this session at a cost of Rs 110 crore, Punjab Government said yesterday.

The Government is fully committed to strengthen higher education in rural areas of the state and the education sector was a priority for the SAD-BJP Government, Chief Parliamentary Secretary (Education) Inderbir Singh Bolaria said here.

The tablets would be distributed with an aim to make rural students aware about the use of technology in present day education, he said.

Under the previous budget, Punjab Government had sanctioned 12 per cent of the whole budget to the education sector, he said.

It has initiated the process of creating a special border area cadre for teachers so as to give a big push to education in border areas, he also said.

Besides the expansion of GNDU campuses, the process had already started to set up a world class University at Amritsar, he said.

The Guru Nanak Dev University has established a regional campus at Sathiala, where computer science, electronics, management, social sciences and science departments have already started functioning.

Apart from this, the infrastructure would also be strengthened at the regional campus with a fund sanction of Rs 14 crore, he said, adding that GNDU has opened another centre at Patti.

Monday, May 27, 2013

152 - India's $35 Tablet Getting New Hardware, Android 4.0 - Tech Hive

By Agam Shah, IDG News Service
  • Apr 9, 2012 1:24 PM

India's highly touted $35 tablet, set to ship in two to three weeks, is getting a makeover with improved hardware and Google's Android 4.0 OS, according to the company assembling the device for the Indian government.

The second-generation Aakash 2 will have a 7-inch capacitive multitouch screen and a faster single-core, 800MHz ARM Cortex-A8 processor, said Suneet Singh Tuli, CEO of Datawind. The new $35 tablet will ship with Android 2.3, but will be upgradeable to Android 4.0 about six to eight weeks after delivery, Tuli said.

"The product development is complete and deliveries are expected to start for Aakash 2 in about two or three weeks," Tuli said in an email.

The tablet's total price is around $45, and the Indian government will subsidize that to $35, Tuli said. The Indian government has budgeted for the acquisition of about 5 million units for the country's fiscal year, which started on April 1, and the tablet will be further upgraded as component prices come down, Tuli said.

The original $35 tablet was announced in July 2010 by the Indian government as a subsidized low-cost computing device for students in the country. Shipments started late last year but have been affected by disputes between Datawind and an Indian education institution responsible for providing specifications and testing the tablet.

The Aakash 2 is a significant upgrade over the original $35 tablet, Aakash, which means sky in Hindi. The original tablet had a 7-inch resistive touchscreen, Android 2.2 and a slower 366MHz processor based on an older ARM architecture. The Aakash 2 will have 256MB of RAM and 2GB flash storage, which are the same as the original $35 tablet.

The tablet will likely be upgraded to dual-core ARM Cortex-A9 processors by the end of the year, Tuli said. Many tablets today use Cortex-A9 processors, including models from Samsung, Asus, Acer and Lenovo.

"We're confident that by the fall, Cortex A9 dual-core processors will be in the same [price] range as what Cortex A8 is at today," Tuli said.

The development and deployment of the original Aakash tablet has been marred by controversies. The Indian government was expected to buy 8 million to 10 million units of the original Aakash tablet by March 31 this year, which was the end of the Indian fiscal year. But shipments have been much lower than expected mostly due to disagreements between Datawind and Indian Institute of Technology-Rajasthan, which was responsible for providing specifications and field testing for the device.

The differences between Datawind and IIT-Rajasthan related to testing criteria used to see if the tablet met certain requirements, Tuli said. The original Aakash device was tested on parameters such as shock, water resistance, temperature and dust and humidity, according to a document sent by Tuli describing test results.


IIT-Rajasthan has now been removed from the project, and the Aakash project has been transferred to the Indian Institute of Technology-Bombay, Tuli said. IIT-Bombay will also be the first buyer of Aakash 2 and purchase about 100,000 units. IIT-Bombay, in Mumbai, and IIT-Rajasthan, in Jodhpur, are among the top science and engineering educational institutions in India.

IIT-Rajasthan did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Agam Shah covers PCs, tablets, servers, chips and semiconductors for IDG News Service. Follow Agam on Twitter at @agamsh. Agam's e-mail address is agam_shah@idg.com

151 - Distribution of Aakash tablets among NIELIT students.


Distribution of Aakash tablets among NIELIT students.

Commissioner Secretary, IT Department distributes Aakash Tablets at NIELIT Srinagar.

NIELIT as one of the select technical Institutes across the country, has received over 200 Aakash tablets from IIT Bombay under project Aakash. 
These tablet’s will be tested for effectiveness as a teaching aid in a class room environment and also as a potential R&D device for promoting application development in FOSS (Free Open Source Software).

In order to inculcate and promote application development on Android
platform, NIELIT held a seminar where in students presented various project ideas targeting Android based applications on Aakash tablet. The application ideas presented by NIELIT students ranged from developing location based warning systems to e-Learning applications for students and faculty.


Sh. Bipul Pathak (IAS), Commissioner/Secretary to Govt., IT Department, Govt. of J&K attended the function as a chief guest. He distributed 93 Aakash tablets among the participating students of MCA and B-level course of NIELIT. He highly appreciated the role of NIELIT to bring in the state-of-the-art technology to promote quality education and training. On the occasion, he encouraged students to develop world class products particularly on Android platform and promised all help from the Department of IT, to the students in doing so. He also announced to give laptops to the winner of the best application developer on Android, which would be reviewed by a peer expert committee. Sh. A.H.Moon, Director NIELIT spoke about the experience of “hole in the wall experiment” which proved that technology can be learnt even in an unsupervised environment given the right kind of conditions. Sh. Muneer Ahmad Dar, Scientist-B & project Aakash coordinator, coordinated the presentations. The function was well attended by staff and students of NIELIT. 


Saturday, May 25, 2013

150 - Pie in the sky - Indian Express

Pie in the sky
The Indian Express : Sat May 25 2013, 03:51 hrs

Government still doesn't get it. Aakash is no panacea for the problems in education

Unveiled as a proud tribute to Indian inventiveness, Aakash, the Central government's $35, low-cost tablet intended to bridge the divide between digital haves and have-nots, has been beset with problems from the outset. After years of trying and failing to meet the goals set for Aakash's success, the HRD ministry appeared to have divested its interest in the project, going by recent noises about how a focus on hardware as a cure for everything that ails the education system is misplaced. Yet, former HRD minister Kapil Sibal, whose brainchild it was, has now ridden to a most unwanted rescue. He has sought intervention from the PMO to address the procurement problems that have hobbled Aakash.

The fundamental problem with Aakash stems from its original ambition of being a nationalist response to the One Laptop Per Child (OLPC) project, which was aimed at providing children in developing countries with cheap laptops. The techno-utopianism that motivates such policies assumes that access to technology can, in and of itself, address the inadequacies in education delivery. It ignores questions of whether Aakash can compensate for bad teachers, or overcome the limitations posed by a lack of basic infrastructure in many parts of the country.

Like OLPC before it, Aakash privileges the tool over the outcome it is meant to achieve. And in Aakash's case, the insistence on the indigenous aspects of the project distracts from the conversation on transforming education, however misdirected it might be, turning it into a discussion on the merits of homegrown innovation instead. Affordable computing is a laudable goal. But why must the government get into the business of consumer electronics?


Thursday, May 23, 2013

149 - dna exclusive: PMO steps in to sort out Aakash mess - dna



Thursday, May 23, 2013, 10:00 IST | Place: New Delhi | Agency: DNA


As the UPA government celebrated nine years of rule on Wednesday, the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO) stepped in to fix one of its biggest failures – the Aakash project.

The project, aimed at providing low-cost tablet computers to the masses, has made no headway after the then HRD minister Kapil Sibal unveiled it in 2011. 

On Wednesday, principal secretary to the prime minister, Pulok Chatterjee, called a meeting with officials of the HRD and IT ministries to know the progress on the project and to decide it’s fate.

The PMO had first written to both the ministries about the statue of the project on May 15.

The scheme to provide tablets at Rs 2,750 has almost been dead since Sibal’s exit from the HRD ministry. Singed by repeated failure in procuring the first one lakh units of the tablet from Canada-based manufacturer Datawind, the ministry, currently headed by MM Pallam Raju, admitted that Aakash had failed to take off. Datawind finally delivered one lakh tablets in May after a delay of one-and-a-half years.

Consequently, the ministry has been dragging its feet on the project and hasn’t moved a cabinet note to float a tender for the next 55 lakh units.

“We don’t want to put the cart before the horse. We want to first seek feedback on the performance of the units delivered by Datawind and then take a call on moving the cabinet note procuring the next 55 lakh units,” said a senior HRD ministry official.

Launched with much fan-fare to bridge the digital divide between the rich and the poor, the tablet has failed to impress its target audience due to poor performance. However, the governments of Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan and Kerela have managed to extract political mileage from this idea by promising tablet computers to school students in their states.

148 - Aakash project on revival path as Sibal ropes in PMO - Indian Express



anubhutivishnoi
New Delhi, Fri May 24 2013, 08:43 hrs

While the Union HRD ministry seems to be losing interest in its flagship $ 35 Aakash tablet project, the so called world's cheapest tablet PC still has quite a fighting chance — thanks to former HRD minister Kapil Sibal who has decided to come to the rescue of his dream project, seeking the intervention of the Prime Minister's Office.

Sources said the Department of Information Technology has written to the Department of Science & Technology asking whether the Aakash tablet project could be routed through them. The DIT, it is learnt, has suggested that DST function as a nodal agency which state governments or organisations can approach if they wished to buy the tablet.

Sibal has also written to the Prime Minister proposing that a manufacturing unit be set up for the tablet in view of the procurement problems with the initial versions of Aakash. Claiming that the latest version of Aakash is a "world class product", Telecom Minister Sibal has written to the PM seeking directions to permit establishment of two manufacturing units for it in the country. Top officials said that 10 prominent manufacturers have contacted the Telecom ministry and DIT to produce Aakash 4 in India and two sites have been identified as possible manufacturing hubs.

The PMO called a meeting on the issue on May 22, which was chaired by Principal Secretary to the Prime Minister Pulok Chatterjee.

It was reportedly decided at the meeting that Secretary, Information Technology, and Secretary, Higher Education, will hold a meeting next week to finalise the technical specifications for Aakash 4.

A full evaluation report on the first one lakh Aakash tablet has been also sought from IIT Bombay.

- See more at: http://www.indianexpress.com/news/aakash-project-on-revival-path-as-sibal-ropes-in-pmo/1119954/#sthash.OgXWV7Me.dpuf

147 - Three U.S. cities try out $40 tablets in schools - The Full Signal



16:03, May 22 2013

Three U.S. cities are rolling out DataWind's Aakash tablets into schools
Three U.S. cities are taking part in a pilot plan to roll out cheap tablets to schools.

DataWind's Aakash tablets are being given to children in Silicon Valley and Atlanta, with Las Vegas beginning its trial soon.

The cheapest tablet, called the Aakash 2 tablet costs just $40.41 and features many aspects either better, or comparable to the original iPad.

There's a 1GHz Cortex A8 processor, 512MB RAM, 4GB internal storage, a 7-inch, 800 x 480 pixel screen and VGA camera.

For an extra $5, you can purchase the 3G and Wi-Fi model.

Following hugely successful trials in India, where the vast majority of children drop out of school before they hit eighth grade, the tablets will be used as an education tool.

When DataWind opened up its order page in India, it expected to get around 50,000 orders in a year. In fact, it found demand was so high for such a low cost device (around 25 percent of a typical Indian's monthly salary), it was getting 100,000 orders per day.

With a backlog of four million worldwide, the company has now shipped 100,000 devices to the government for distribution in schools and 500,000 to consumers.

The Indian government now plans to hand out the tablet to 220 million school children as an educational aid. Thailand, Turkey, Nigeria, Honduras, Brazil, Panama and Nicaragua have all announced they too, will be considering rolling out tablets as part of their education policy.

Although the tablets may not prove as popular in the U.S. as they have been in less developed territories, 20 percent of children in this country don't have internet at home. DataWind thinks introducing devices like the Aakash 2 will enable those without access to internet to finally access the Web.

DataWind previously launched the PocketSurfer, an enlarged smartphone that was designed purely to access the Web with an annual subsidized data connection.

146 - Live Mint Video on Aakash


Wednesday, May 22, 2013

145 - Super regulator plan for higher education may be scrapped - Live Mint

Officials say there’s a need to strengthen functioning institutions such as UGC rather than scrapping them


M.M. Pallam Raju took over as HRD minister in October last year after a cabinet reshuffle.
Updated: Wed, May 22 2013. 08 31 AM IST

New Delhi: After putting on ice the much-hyped, low-cost tablet called Aakash , the human resource development (HRD) ministry is set to junk another plan to establish an autonomous “super regulator” for higher education, championed by Kapil Sibal when he was HRD minister.

There’s little enthusiasm in the present dispensation to pursue the plan for the National Commission for Higher Education and Research (NCHER), said two government officials with knowledge of the situation. M.M. Pallam Raju took over as HRD minister in October last year after a cabinet reshuffle.

Sibal, who is minister for communications and information technology, as well as law, had pushed the plan for the creation of NCHER, meant to be an overarching body overseeing higher education that would subsume existing regulators such as the University Grants Commission (UGC), the All India Council for Technical Education (AICTE) and National Council of Teacher Education (NCTE).

“The ministry is unwilling to pursue the NCHER plan,” said one of the two officials cited above. “There is no point scrapping functioning institutions like UGC, AICTE or NCTE.”

Instead, there is a “need to strengthen them”, said this official. Neither of the two officials wanted to be named.

Lack of political support has held up several education Bills in Parliament in the last three years. Some of the pending Bills include the Education Tribunal Bill, the Prohibition of Unfair Practices Bill, the National Accreditation Regulatory Authority for Higher Educational Institutions Bill, the Foreign Educational Institutions (Regulation of Entry and Operations) Bill, 2010.
The first official said the Higher Education Research Bill, which provides for setting up NCHER, is back in the HRD ministry after a parliamentary committee suggested that existing regulators not be scrapped. The Bill had sought to repeal the UGC Act, 1956; the AICTE Act, 1987; and the NCTE Act, 1993.

On 3 May, the standing committee said in a report that it strongly favours “continuance of the existence of these vital bodies for effective regulation of higher and technical education”.

“We have to be practical about what can be achieved and what is tough,” said the second official.

The ministry believes that since nearly a dozen Bills are pending in Parliament, there is no point in pursuing those which may not come through in the next two sessions of Parliament.

“In the current situation of key Bills pending in the Parliament, the ministry intends to pursue the reform through executive decisions,” the second official added.

The decision to shelve NCHER marks the second reversal for the plans pushed by Sibal when he was HRD minister during 2009-2012. Aakash, the $35 tablet that was pitched as India’s solution to bridge the divide between digital haves and have-nots, has been put in cold storage, with Pallam Raju telling reporters in March: “Let’s not get obsessed with hardware... The overall (issue) is how we enable students. Let the students decide which device is useful,”

The HRD ministry put up a cabinet note on procuring five million more tablets in 2013, but the note has been returned to the ministry. The plan to float a fresh tender and have the device manufactured by some public sector companies has effectively been stalled, Mint reported on 23 March.

“The ministry seems to have realized that Bills and educational policies prepared in haste are not going to achieve success,” said H. Chaturvedi, alternate president of Education Promotion Society of India, a lobby group of education institutes.

“The former minister relied more on (a) few bureaucrats without having enough consultations and that’s why the Bills are facing criticism from academicians and lawmakers,” said Chaturvedi, who is also the director of Birla Institute of Management Technology in Greater Noida.

The existing regulatory system seems set to stay with some changes.
On the HRD ministry’s direction, UGC has already issued a notice for mandatory accreditation of all institutions that have either completed six years of existence or have had two batches graduate from it. Previously accreditation was voluntary and less than 20% of the 33,000 colleges are accredited currently.
Unless an institution opts for accreditation, it won’t get UGC grants, as per the new guideline.

Similarly, AICTE too will put in place a mechanism for mandatory accreditation of technical institutions. This has happened even as a Bill on mandatory accreditation of educational institutes was pending in Parliament.
Similarly, the HRD ministry is looking to issue an executive order to curb malpractices in educational institutions even as legislation on the subject is awaiting parliamentary approval.

Outside the ministry, there does exist support for status quo.

“There is a bad system in our country that when an old institution is not doing great, the solution is (to) create a new (one),” said Pritam Singh, a former director of the Indian Institute of Management-Lucknow. “I believe AICTE and UGC are good institutions; what is required is to make them enablers of quality education than just regulators.”

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

144 - Reality sinks Aakash tablet dream - Telegraph India

Reality sinks Aakash tablet dream 
OUR SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT

New Delhi, March 22: India today virtually dumped its vaunted project to produce the world’s cheapest computer tablets and provide them free to its school and college students, as the gap between promise and practicability increasingly became glaring.

Human resource development minister M.M. Pallam Raju announced a freeze on his ministry’s plan to seek cabinet nod for floating tenders for the manufacture and supply of 50 lakh Aakash tablets.

He appeared to be scripting an elegy for the project: “Aakash was a very good initiative. It generated very good interest…. Let us not get obsessed with the hardware.”

The Rs 2,276 tablet had been touted as India’s answer to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s One Laptop Per Child programme, whose computers cost more than twice as much, and was meant to showcase the country’s genius in “frugal innovation”.

World leaders had lavished praise on the audacious effort that promised to revolutionise a struggling education system from the grassroots. The name, Aakash, appeared to suggest that the sky was the limit for a poor nation that had emerged as an information technology “super power”.

But NRI-promoted Canadian firm DataWind, which was to manufacture and supply the initial 100,000 tablets by March 31, got overwhelmed by the project and went into the red by last year-end after supplying just 20,000.

The fiasco has cast doubt on the whole idea that small companies contracted by the Indian government can succeed where even China’s technology manufacturers might fear to tread given the price stipulated. This realisation, officials said, was behind the latest decision.

Raju’s cautious answer to the obvious question — whether the project was dead — was: “Today, devices are changing. Technology is changing so much. Prices have come down. We leave it to the market.”

He claimed the Aakash project had changed the market, bringing down prices. “Because the Aakash initiative was taken, so many others got into it (making cheap computers).... So, the prices have come down. So, even if the supply of Aakash fails, there are others who have come into the market,” Raju said.

Under the ministry’s original plans, local manufacturers would have been given preference in the contracts for 50 lakh tablets, which were to be distributed among schools, colleges and universities at further subsidised prices.

Sources said the students were not supposed to pay for the tablets but to borrow them from the institutions. By freezing the plan, the ministry is now practically asking the students to buy computers from the market, where similar tablets now cost about Rs 8,000.

The Aakash was developed by scientists from Indian Institutes of Technology and the Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore, under a ministry programme called NMICT. “We are reviewing the NMICT scheme,” higher education secretary Ashok Thakur said.

143 - Aakash tablet cancelled by Govt - India Blooms

India Blooms News Service (IBNS)

New Delhi, Mar 24 (IBNS): The ambitious move by the Indian government to provide every child with a laptop comes to a halt as the Canada-based Datawind fails to deliver the required number of tablets in time, said media reports on Sunday.




Human Resource and Development (HRD) Minister Pallam Raju decided to cancel the rest of the shipment stating the reasons being, delays in manufacturing, a faulty processor and low memory, according to a CNN IBN report.

This project was very close to the earlier HRD Minister Sibal, who had launched it and had been sure that the project would be a milestone in Indian education.

Hyped as world’s lowest cost tablet and an answer to the I-Pad, Aakash-2 was supposed to be supplied to 22 million students and faculty at 50 per cent subsidised cost.

Only 17,000 of the targeted 1 lakh tablets have been sent to Indian Institute of Technology-Bombay so far. Manufacturer Datawind says that there are 29,400 in production at the moment. Even combined these numbers fall way below the target.

The final launch price of Aakash 2 which was estimated at $35 has also doubled over the course of production, and the final product itself has many glitches.

The Ministry is now reviewing the National Mission on Education through Information and Communication Technology (NMEICT). The Aakash tablet was to play a major role in this initiative.

HRD Minister Raju admitted in a CNN IBN interview, that there was a gap in the supply and production. “The challenge is productionising it. That is where the failure has come. If the productionisation had happened on time, students would have accessed it.”

142 - Fate of ‘Aakash’ project hangs in balance - Oman Tribune


Fate of ‘Aakash’ project hangs in balance

NEW DELHI The fate of the much touted low-cost computing device ‘Aakash’ looks uncertain with the federal government on Friday conceding that there has been a “failure” in its production.

Concerned over the tardy progress, the Human Resource and Development (HRD) Ministry has written to Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Bombay (the executing body) to ensure the vendor (Datawind) meets the terms and conditions and the supply order by March 31 in letter and spirit, failing which action could be initiated against it.

The ministry is also awaiting a report from a committee headed by Rajendra Pawar before taking a call about the prospects of the device on which many students had pinned their hope.

“The other challenge is in its production. That is where the failure has come. If it was produced on time, students would have accessed it. The product exists but we are not able to produce it as much as required,” HRD Minister MM Pallam Raju said.

The tablet was promised to be made available to students at a subsidised rate of Rs1,130. Datawind was asked to supply 100,000 pieces initially, which never happened.

Raju, though, maintained that the project has created an environment for similar other devices in the market which students as well can go for instead of being too “obsessed” with the device.

“Aakash is a tablet which will enable you to access the content. But there are others who have come up. Students will pick up whatever serves the purpose better and affordable. We will continue to work on the product as long as development of the product is concerned,” he said, when asked if the tablet should be opened to market force which can determine which product can survive rather than focussing on it solely. He hoped in due course, other vendors could also develop the device.

Raju said the ultimate aim should be to enable a student to access content at an affordable price through enabling environment and exploiting the ‘National Mission on Education using ICT’ platform.

Press Trust of Indi 

141 - E-gov projects to reduce corruption and improve entrepreneurship-ZD Net



Summary: At a slow but steady pace, departments within the Government of India are introducing e-governance portals.

By Manan Kakkar for India IT | April 30, 2013 -- 01:32 GMT (11:32 AEST)

In a country where corruption is an accepted norm, e-governance projects are a hope that can change how things operate. One such attempt is by the Passport department of the government of India. Early this year, the Chief Passport Officer Muktesh Kumar Pardeshi talked about an enforcing online payments for Passports. The initiative will slowly reduce the the number of a people paying "agents" hoping that it will get them a passport due to the agents' relationship within the Passport offices.

The project in partnership with TCS, was started back in 2012 and some very promising results. In addition to reducing corruption within the system, passport applications are being processsed at a surprising rate. In India's capital, according to TCS, out of the 306,496 applications received since the project started, 295,077 have been processed. Part of this success was achieved due to improvements in the police network within the area. A dedicated network was established between the 11 police zones allowing swift application verification.
To recap, that's transparency in the passport application process and passport verification process.

Through another project launched in January of 2013, the government wants to empower businesses with the necessary legal obligations they need to fulfil. The eBiz portal will be a one-stop-portal for businesses to understand licenses and permits that will be needed. Part of the Government to Business services, the portal will allow entrepreuners to submit forms, get approvals, permits and licenses. The portal is being piloted in Andhra Pradesh, Delhi, Haryana, Maharashtra and Tamil Nadu. The initiative was started back in 2009 with Infosys winning the bid to develop the portal.

A more recently launched initiative is the web-based Electronic Project Proposal System (e-PPS). Introduced by Kapil Sibal, the project aims to improve the R&D project proposal & funding process. The new system will replace a manual exercise requiring a hard-copy of R&D proposals. The new system will offer a single dashboard to submit proposals for funds as well as monitor and manage the funded projects. 

As Indians continue getting logged into the nation's massive citizen-database Aadhar, and several get their hands on the government's $50 tablet computer Aakash, these additional projects are promising.

140 - Datawind To Launch 4G-enabled Phablet


April 29, 2013
Danish Khan

The maker of Aakash tablet Datawind is expanding its wings beyond the tablet sphere and the Indian market with its latest 4G LTE enabled “Phablet” device, which is currently being tested in the US market with one of the leading telecom operators.

“Our latest phablet device will be priced under sub-$100 category and will appear in the second half of this fiscal year,” Suneet Singh Tuli, CEO of Datawind told Light Reading India. Tuli was one of the panelists at UBM's 4G World India expo 2013.

The latest LTE enabled phablet device will be running on the FDD-LTE technology, which is standard technology adopted in the US for providing 4G services. The specifications of Datawind’s latest device are still unknown though the device could feature a 5-inch display.

Tuli said that big screen devices will drive more video consumption, which is crucial for driving the 4G growth. On Datawind LTE phablet’s availability in the Indian market, Tuli said that the Indian market is still in nascent stages with only one telco, Bharti Airtel, operating in the space. Airtel is currently offering services through dongles and router. The company did announce the launch of Huawei-made device but it is not yet available in the market.

“At present, we have plans to roll-out the device in the US only. We are observing the Indian 4G market and whenever the right time comes, we will introduce the India-specific device,” he added.

The Indian telcos have selected TDD-LTE technology for providing 4G services in the country, except Videocon Telecommunications which will roll-out 4G services running on FDD-LTE technology by the 2013 end. 

With India being one of the major markets for Datawind in the tablet domain, it is expected that the company would be among the first few companies to launch 4G LTE devices in the country to get the first mover advantage.

Datawind is known for catalysing the Indian tablet industry with a sub-$35 Aakash tablet. Given its preparation for the 4G ecosystem, the company could again play a crucial role in catalyzing this new ecosystem with its cheaper devices.

-Danish Khan, Correspondent Light Reading India 


139 - CALLING It QUITS - Indian Express


: Mon May 13 2013, 03:21 hrs

SELDOM do you see an IIT director resigning from his post. Prof Prem Kalra, director IIT Jodhpur, has done just that, barely a month after he had his institute's campus inaugurated by the HRD Minister. Kalra, it is learnt, has cited personal reasons for stepping down from what is considered a coveted top job. Incidentally, the IIT under his leadership also courted some controversy. First, the Aakash tablet project was unceremoniously shifted out from his IIT to IIT Bombay after serious differences between manufacturer Datawind and the IIT Jodhpur administration. More recently, the IIT also failed to ink the long pending MoU with France amid differences between the two stakeholders.




138 - The world’s cheapest tablet is about to become the world’s cheapest phablet - Quartz


$20
By Leo Mirani @lmirani May 2, 2013


Now hold it to your face. AP Photo/Gurinder Osan

DataWind, the company behind the $40 tablet, this week finished shipping 100,000 devices to the Indian Institute of Technology. It’s been quite a journey. But DataWind’s founders are already working on the next iteration, called Aakash 3, and it has one significant upgrade: a place to stick a SIM card, so it can connect to cellular networks.

DataWind’s pitch for the new Aakash 3 goes like this: “An internal cellular modem at no additional cost, which allows the device to be used both as a mobile smart phone and also for ubiquitous internet connectivity with a basic SIM, will help herald India’s internet revolution.”

That may well be true. Access and price are two of the main factors driving the growth of mobile broadband. Cheap devices and data plans are increasingly the only way to gain market share in India—and, indeed, in much of the world. A recent report about the use of Opera Mini, a web browser for mobile phones, found that 9 of the top 10 handsets using the software, mostly from Samsung, cost less than 10,000 rupees ($185). That’s still a high upper limit, but domestic firms such as Micromax and Karbonn dominate the sub-$100 market and are rapidly gaining overall market share.

The Indian government plans to sell the Aakash 2 for educational and development purposes at the subsidised rate of $20. (It’s about as powerful as the original iPad but also has slots for USB and MicroSD devices, a camera, and twice the memory.) If the government also subsidized the Aakash 3 with a voice-and-data enabled version, that would make it the cheapest phablet in existence. Not that phablets need any extra help to become the world’s most ubiquitous computing devices.


137 - Go Tech's dual SIM FunTab Duos tablet will be below Rs 7000-CIOL


Published On :Fri, May 3,2013


News | by Muntazir Abbas

 Go Tech- the makers of affordable computing tablets, is all set to launch Android 4.1-based FunTab Duos tablet PC. The price, though the company declined to confirm, could be Rs 6,999.

Powered with Cortex A8 1.2 GHz processor, the new tablet would have dual SIM slot and 1GB RAM. To be equipped with 3600 mAh battery, FunTab Duos will feature 7.1-inch display, and would facilitate 2G/3G voice calls. Go Tech, during the next quarter, also plans to rollout 3 to 4 dual-core and quad-core models.

Speaking to CIOL, Go Tech MD Gaurav Khanna said that while making a low-cost tablet, they leverage technology innovation with optimum quality so as to offer consumers a value for their money. "FunTab Duos tablet will be priced at sub Rs 7k and it will be launched by the end of May," he informed.

Indian market, Khanna said, has a huge potential and ultra-low cost tablets like Aakash are healthy competition as well as give choice to consumers. Go Tech, currently offers affordable tablets in a price range of Rs 3,400 to Rs 7,400 with 7 to 9-inch display, and 2G/3G and Wi-Fi features.

Go Tech, with an ambition to scale up production, is also in talks with two investors, but has however refused to name them. "We are growing at an incredible pace. During the last couple of years, we have grown to 100 per cent," he said. We strive to bring competitive and compelling products that should be acceptable to market, added Khanna.

The company is also planning to participate in the upcoming global bidding for Aakash. "We will look at the specifications and requirements once the tender rolls out, and our management will take a final call," informed Khanna.

The new Go Tech FunTab Duos tablet, company said, will be available at e-Commerce marketplace that include portals such as Flipkart, SnapDeal, eBay, Amazon and Homeshop18, in addition to retail partner network.


136 - Attitude Next 6339 launched - New Indian Express


By Express Features - KOCHI
18th May 2013 12:54 PM

Technopark-based Telmoco Development Labs Pvt Ltd, Kerala’s first incubated consumer electronics start-up company, has forayed into the retail segment with its latest offering - ‘Attitude Next 6339’ - a 7-inch Android Tablet Phone. The product will be available in over 400 retail stores in Kerala and over 100 online stores at `7,999 from May 26.

 The new member of the Attitude series, Next 6339, was unveiled by Industries Minister P K Kunhalikutty by handing over the device to Francis Mukkannikal, Director - MFJ Communications and Marketing Pvt Ltd, the official distributors for retail market. IT Principal Secretary P H Kurian, Telmoco Directors Nijesh C R and Aadith Bose; Technopark CEO Girish Babu; Senior Business Development Manager M Vasudevan; Technopark TBI Secretary and Registrar K C Chandrasekharan Nair; and manager Sreejith Sreenivasan were also present.
 Kunhalikutty, who congratulated the team, said that the government was happy to see that a consumer electronics company from Technopark had developed state-of-the-art products at par with global brands.
 It was in last year in April that Telmoco had launched its first product - Attitude Daksha - in the market which was touted as a competitor for the government-launched Aakash Tablet computers. As many as 2,500 of the tablets were sold out. The firm is associated with Salora International, one of the largest distribution networks in India, with the e-Literacy Mission and also with a state-owned project for the Attitude Daksha tablets. The company was honoured with the fourth position in AABI (Asian Association of Business Incubation) 2012 from 1,286 nominations. It is also registered with GSMA (Global System of Mobile Association) and is a registered partner for using IMEI, SAR compliance products in India.
 ‘’We are constantly researching to bring in latest technological advancements and our Next 6339 is equipped with the latest technology such as 2G Voice Calling facility, dual camera (0.3 VGA front camera, 2MP back camera), A-GPS, high quality IPS Clear View Dynamic Resolution Screen (1024*600 pixels), on the go FM Radio, storage (8GB, 512 MB RAM internal with micro SD, 32 GB external) and high performance battery (5500 mAH, 4.2 V) along with fully-loaded informative and entertaining apps,’’ said Nijesh C R, Director, Telmoco.

135 - How a $20 tablet from India could blindside PC makers, educate billions and transform computing as we know it


AAKASH 2
By Christopher Mims @mims November 11, 2012

The Ubislate tablet is less expensive than even the cheapest smartphones. Datawind

Suneet Tuli, the 44-year-old CEO of UK/Canadian/Indian startup Datawind, is having a taxing day. “I’m underwater,” he says as he struggles to find a cell signal outside a restaurant in Mumbai. Two days from then, on Sunday Nov. 11, the president of India, Pranab Mukherjee, will have unveiled the seven-inch Aakash 2 tablet computer Tuli’s company is selling to the government for distribution to 100,000 university students and professors. (If things go well, the government plans to order as many as 5.86 million.) In the meantime, Tuli is deluged with calls from reporters, and every day his company receives thousands of new orders for the commercial version of the Aakash 2. Already, he’s facing a backlog of four million unfulfilled pre-orders.
We’re speaking over the same overtaxed cellular networks that he hopes will enable Datawind to educate every schoolchild in India through the world’s cheapest functional tablet computer. But it’s a losing battle, as his connection to one of the 13 separate cell carriers in Mumbai buckles under too much competing traffic. He has to repeat himself when he tells me the ultimate price university students will pay for his tablet, after half its cost has been subsidized by the Indian government.

It’s $20.

In India, that’s a quarter the cost of competing tablets with identical specifications. Similar tablets in China, the world champion in low-cost components and manufacturing, go for $45 and up, wholesale. Which means the Aakash 2 isn’t just the cheapest fully functional tablet PC on the planet because the Indian government has decided it should be—it’s the cheapest, period.

In the developing world, and especially in India, a country where one billion people have a monthly income less than $200, every rupee matters. Aakash means “blue sky” in Hindi, and that’s a fair description of Datawind’s goals for the tablet. Ultimately, says Tuli, the government would like to distribute one to each of India’s 220 million students. India has 900 million cell phone subscriptions, but in a country where smartphones are rare, 95% of Indians have no computing device. Which means the Aakash, or something like it, could become the sole computer for hundreds of millions of people in India, not to mention elsewhere in the developing world.

Unlike the failed Aakash 1, which was supposed to roll out in 2011 but which was so under-powered that it was virtually unusable, the Aakash 2 is no toy. 

Even jaded US gadget reviewers have found it as usable as tablets costing many times more. It has a processor as powerful as the first iPad and twice as much RAM memory. It uses Google’s Android operating system, which now runs on three out of four smartphones and four out of 10 tablets shipped worldwide. Its LCD touchscreen displays full-screen video without hiccups, it browses the web, and it even holds up when playing videogames. If you’re a student with no other computing device, attaching a keyboard to it transforms it into a serviceable replacement for a traditional PC.
Ubislate is the commercially-available version of the Aakash 2 tablet


Disrupting the world’s largest tech companies

“The revolution will come from the developing world to the US,” says Vivek Wadhwa, an entrepreneur and academic. “These tablets will kill the markets for high-end players—for Microsoft in particular.”

Wadhwa knows Tuli and has become the Aakash 2′s champion stateside, writing about the device and getting it into the hands of executives. He believes that the $40 price of the tablet could drop to $25 within a year. “I showed a Google executive [this] tablet. He suddenly realized that his $99 tablet isn’t going to stand up to the $25 tablet from India.”

Many in Silicon Valley are suddenly fixated on cheap tablets. “I see a lot of the PC makers and hardware companies here [in the US] are going to build a tablet strategy,” says Jay Goldberg, a financial analyst who was surprised to discover on his last trip to China just how cheap functional 7″ tablets have become. “But if there are already $45 tablets out there, even that second-tier strategy [of replacing lost PC sales with tablets] is going to fail.”

Everyone I interviewed for this piece thought that Apple, as a company that differentiates itself by being a high-end brand, would survive the coming of cheap tablets. But Goldberg and Wadhwa agreed that other manufacturers of Android-based tablets, even Samsung, would have a hard time staying in the hardware market.

Educating the “ignored billion”

“Our effort in all of this,” says Tuli, “Was to use technology to fight poverty. What happens when you try to make it affordable at this level?”
Every year, the Indian government spends $13 per student just to ship them textbooks. In primary schools, all texts are based on a standardized, public domain curriculum that is easily transformed into free ebooks. The government is considering paying the full cost of the tablet when handing them out to primary-school-age children. In that case, the $40 the government pays Datawind for each tablet could be recouped over the projected three-year life of one of these tablets, says Tuli.

But the Aakash 2 isn’t just about replacing textbooks: It’s about bringing the full-fledged Internet to users who have never touched it before. In India, competition for wireless connectivity is so cutthroat that it’s possible to get an unlimited prepaid mobile data plan for $2 a month. The basic Aakash 2 has wifi, but an upgraded model, available commercially for 3,500 rupees, or about $70, includes SIM cards and the radio required to communicate with a cellphone network. As costs fall the company will incorporate these features into the base model.

In India there is little 3G wireless connectivity, and data speeds are slow, using on an older technology, GPRS. Normally, browsing the web over GPRS would be nearly impossible. So Datawind developed a compression and acceleration technology that, it says, makes web pages load in three seconds instead of 15 to 20.

The Indian government is already connecting 600 universities and 1,200 colleges with broadband and wifi, in addition to an effort to connect 250,000 villages with fiber-optic internet in the next two years, at a cost of $4.5 billion. Even so, says Tuli, almost all connectivity to individual devices—the so called “last mile” connection of the internet—will be achieved through cellphone networks.

The world’s isolated, rural and impoverished places are just the sort of locations where Tuli sees tablets acting as an educational supplement. In a recent experiment in Ethiopia, Nicholas Negroponte, founder of the original “One Laptop Per Child” project, gave Android-powered tablets to children in an isolated village. Despite having never had any previous contact with high technology, within months children had used the tablets to teach themselves the English alphabet. Negroponte’s ultimate goal is to see whether or not the children, who have no teachers, can use the tablets to learn to read.

There are a number of reasons Aakash 2 could succeed where the original OLPC project failed. For one, Aakash is for the most part a home-grown solution to problems identified in advance by the Indian government, where the OLPC was initiated by western funders who lacked sufficient knowledge of local conditions and needs. At a price that never fell below $100, OLPC devices were also significantly more expensive than the Aakash 2, limiting its reach. And as a mature ecosystem, Android has many orders of magnitude more apps available for it than the OLPC could ever command–consumers are much more likely to embrace devices that can already run huge catalogs of videogames, media and other applications.

Free tablets and ubiquitous computing

“[In the US,] you will see tablets everywhere,” says Wadhwa. “They will become disposable, and you will see thousands of new applications within a short period of time.”

Tuli thinks he can eventually bring the Aakash 2 to the US at a $50 retail price, and if trends continue, that price will continue to fall.

It doesn’t take much imagination to think of applications for devices that cheap. “If I were to start a company today, I’d say what kind of a business can I build if the hardware is almost disposable?” says Goldberg. “In a restaurant, if every waiter or maitre d’ has a tablet, now someone can go build a good restaurant automation tool that links tablets to the chef station.”

At some point, too, any company that can squeeze enough ads onto this class of tablets will start giving the tablet away for free. (Remember when USB thumb drives became inescapable promotional giveaways?) The commercial version of the Aakash 2, the $70 Ubislate, affords Datawind almost no profit margin at all. But, like Amazon and Google, which have adopted a business model of selling their hardware at cost and making money on content instead (Amazon by selling e-books, and Google by selling ads), Datawind is using Yahoo’s ad marketplace to sell advertisements on the toolbar of apps on the Ubislate.

At home, there are plenty of reasons tablets could end up in every room. They might control the thermostat or a home energy management system. Stuck on a fridge, they could help keep track of the contents, saving on food buying and trips to the grocery store. (Samsung already offers a refrigerator with a built-in touchscreen tablet.)

The too-many-tablets problem would accelerate the trend of people keeping all their personal data “in the cloud”, accessed the same way from any screen. That’s the vision of Google’s web-based operating system, Chrome OS; Amazon’s streaming video and music libraries; and Apple’s iCloud, which lets you use the same music, films and apps across multiple Apple devices. People might find themselves dedicating tablets to specific functions or locations, and seamlessly continuing tasks on one screen that were begun on another.

“I was at Intel this week, and like other companies in the Valley, they’re trying to figure out what consumers really use tablets for,” says Goldberg. “I think most people agree we’re not going to have three laptops at home in the future. 

We’re going to have a bunch of tablets and one desktop or media server.”

From the poor in the developing world, to the poor everywhere

“Over the weekend I was at a cocktail party,” says Goldberg. “Someone said, ‘I was just on the Silk Road in China, in a no-name restaurant, and everyone had tablets. No menus, just tablets. What we may see is, it comes from emerging markets first.”

One of the reasons these tablets are so cheap in China and India, where they are made, is that production costs have now fallen so far that shipping, distribution and customs duties have become a significant part of their price in the rich world. (Devices comparable to the Aakash 2 or the generic 7″ tablets of China cost $99 and up in the US.)

This means that to make technology disposable, manufacturing needs to move. The Aakash 2, for example, is currently assembled in Amritsar, a city in the far north of India, near the border with Pakistan. But, says Tuli, “We don’t rule out assembly done in the US. Labor is not a big component to this, so if it costs me $1.50 extra and I can put a ‘made in USA’ label on it, then it’s something we will seriously consider.”

Inevitably, tablets will become ubiquitous in education. Already, wealthy schools are abandoning textbooks in favor of iPads. “I get school boards and schools from the US and Canada regularly calling us up, asking for devices,” says Tuli. “Inner-city schools say to us, ‘It’s not just a problem over there—40% of our kids don’t have access to PCs and the internet.”

Why poor countries might take up tablets even faster than rich ones
In the US, smartphone adoption has only just crossed the 50% mark. Some of that has to do with price–even “free” smartphones are attached to plans with recurring monthly charges–but it’s also behavioral. Meanwhile, China is projected to overtake the US by the end of 2012 by share of smartphones purchased, and by 2016 India will be in third place.
“It’s taken the [digital video recorder] 13 years to reach about 50% penetration,” says Rakesh Agrawal, who advises technology companies on product strategy. “Consumer behavior just takes a long time to change. Even if the price point is there, it will take a while unless something is completely revolutionary.”
In other words, people will start buying something in large numbers if it solves a big problem for them. But most first-world problems—needing an easier way to record your favorite TV programs or keep track of what’s in your fridge—just aren’t that pressing. In developing countries, on the other hand, technology can transform lives.
For example, to avoid racking up cellphone charges, the poorest communicate with one another by calling and allowing the recipient’s phone to ring a given number of times–one ring for “come home” and two for “I’m fine,” for example. Cell phones help husbands and wives, separated by the migration to cities for work, keep in touch.
“Now, not only can they hear each other, they could Skype each other,” says Wadhwa. “They could send money electronically. There’s ecommerce developing in India. They can go online to check the price of products, the weather forecast, local newspapers. This is going to be revolutionary for the developing world. We don’t understand in the West what a dramatic change lies ahead because of this connectivity. It’s going to boost the growth of the developing countries for sure.”
Enabling that revolution will require many more manufacturers than Datawind. The company is scrambling to meet its current obligations, and Tuli says that in six to nine months Datawind will be making 500,000 tablets per month—half again as many units as Google’s hit Nexus 7 tablet has been shipping every month. China’s unbranded 7-inch tablets are widely available, but bringing them to other countries at a price comparable to the Aakash will require setting up factories and supply chains in every country in which tablets will be sold.
“You will see regional tablets,” says Wadhwa. “There’s no magic here—you can buy components all over world and build locally, and voilà, you have a tablet.” Eventually, in other words, we might think as much about the maker of our tablets as we think about the printers of our books or the manufacturers of our paper. As a medium, tablets and their successors could become the ultimate commodity.



134 - Aakash II at the UN? Why didn’t we send Tata Nano or Mitticool for that matter? - Seema Singh


Aakash II at the UN? Why didn’t we send Tata Nano or Mitticool for that matter?
11/28/2012
Seema Singh





Maybe because the government publicity machine was not so well-oiled then!
Even before a tenth of the promised 100,000 devices was delivered, tested and given an OK by the testing labs at IIT Bombay and Chennai, the publicity overdrive, particularly in the Western press, gave it thumbs up! Here are some of those stories here, here, and here.

Going by some newspaper reports, MHRD’s messy project Aakash II will be showcased at the UN today. Why? For cobbling up, or let’s give it to them, for assembling a product that is $4 or $5 cheaper than what other manufacturers in India are offering or are willing to offer?

The ministry considers it a worthy frugal innovation from India. Really? What is Indian about it? Which Indian institution or Indian company has done its two bit to call it an innovation? Does the battery last for a full college day, since it is meant for college students? Or does it charge under the sun? Or is it designed to help a student read the problem and work out the solution? Has it been ‘engineered’ for education?

I think I have my definition of innovation right. And by that account a Tata Nano, or a Mitticool (earthen refrigerator) or the inexpensive Chitra cardiac valve is any day a deserving case of frugal innovation from India than Aakash II. Why weren’t they showcased anywhere by the government?

A few days ago some reports began trickling in that the device is being assembled by sourcing components from China or that the ready-to-use device has literally been air-lifted from China and supplied by Data Wind. A volley of charges and counter charges flew thick and fast.

I have given up on the device; it’s just too messy and riddled with politics to yield any good result in the near future. All the facts that I unearthed while reporting for this feature, What Went Wrong with Aakash Tablet, published in June, convinced me that this was a project, yes just a project, with no vision or roadmap. For a brief while when I saw those gushing reports about the second version of the device, I thought perhaps the ministry and the institutions have woken up and it has revived. I even took a small silent credit for having contributed to this process of revival because I did hammer the officials in various corridors of power to talk about their plan. Though it’s another matter that nobody agreed to speak to me, my emailed questions remained just emailed questions and my phone calls remained unattended. But the way Aakash II is turning out, I am once again convinced that there never was any “concept”, nobody ever wanted to build a device for students, nobody thought how one could “study” on tablets, not just read; whether 7 inch display is good enough…

A person who has seen all the three versions of the device says Aakash I, which was very patchy and eventually disastrous in function, was “at least built ground up and had a personality”. In between another device surfaced in IIT labs, which had the same casing as Aakash 1. The third version, or Aakash II as we know it, is just any other device, with neither any design nor any technological innovation.

Some could argue the apps constitute the innovation. Well, you get them dime a dozen. India doesn’t need to go the UN showcasing that.

I may appear to be a pessimist but that’s in the short term; in the long term, I am an optimist. There’s one good thing that’s emerged from MHRD’s tablet saga. Many engineers, apart from electronics manufacturers, have begun testing their skill and ingenuity. The result: a suite of products that will come out, not only for students, but for the enterprise segment, loaded with cool applications that solve real world problems.

Take for instance, the STAMP tablet from STAMP Computers’ Pvt Ltd, which was spun off from AllGo Embedded Systems as a product company after it received encouraging response in the field trials.

Designing and developing in India– which includes hardware, software and mechanical design — the founders have identified components from trusted suppliers and have negotiated price directly with the vendor. They have also designed a firmware which performs automated testing on the shop-floor for every piece assembled in the factory. Its first version was manufactured in China; for its next version, it has tied up with local Indian partners and the pilot production will begin soon.

What is the connection with Aakash II?


STAMP founders have been one of those several hopefuls waiting for the cloudy Aakash to clear up and the procurement process to begin. The tenders were supposed to be out in April this year, then it got pushed to December. But for December timeline to work, 100,000 Aakash II units should have been delivered and tested by September. That delivery is said to happen “sometime early next year”.

There’s many a slip between the cup and the lip. I fear that with every slip in Aakash, it’s going to hit the genuine, innovative entrepreneurs (not the fly-by-night operators who are aplenty) harder! It already has in most cases.





133 - India's Rickety Bridge Across Its Digital Divide By Chandrahas Choudhury Apr 23, 2013 4:05 AM ET - Bloomberg



The device was supposed to democratize and accelerate India's march into the information-technology era. It was supposed to be India's answer to Nicholas Negroponte's One Laptop Per Child project: an indigenous brand that brought computing power to children in village schools, and to students of all ages from poor families, at a third of the cost estimated by Negroponte. Even before it hit the market, it generated glowing coverage for its ambitious scale, reach and price. After its pilot version faltered and was sent back to the drawing board, its second incarnation was presented late last year by United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon as an example of "frugal innovation."

That was about as good as it got, though, for Aakash ("sky"), the $35 computing tablet promised in 2010 by the Ministry of Human Resource Development. Two and a half years later, the project is on life-support. Almost every promise made, or intimated, has failed to come true.

The tablet was launched in October 2011 by the human resource development minister, the ambitious and outspoken Kapil Sibal, and distributed to 500 students from all over India. "The rich have access to the digital world, the poor and ordinary have been excluded," Sibal said. "Aakash will end that digital divide."

The device that Sibal proudly displayed was manufactured, to specifications set by the government, by DataWind Ltd., a small Canadian company, which had won the tender to produce a first run of 100,000 devices. Within weeks of the tablet being launched, it had more than 1 million pre-orders (some of them at a market price of about $60, while those bought by the Indian government were to cost about $50 and would be sold to students and educational institutions at a subsidized rate of $35).

Even then, cracks were beginning to appear in the story. First, as reviewers of the pilot devices noted, the Indian research and development contribution was minimal though some of the country's elite engineering institutes were involved. A set of specs for the device was provided to DataWind, which then began to source the components for the tablet from markets where they were available most cheaply -- that is, China.

A report in the Hindustan Times last year showed that the company had bought a large batch of tablets from Chinese manufacturers to be passed on as Aakash tablets, meaning that the only thing Indian about the device was the branding.

And then there was the gap between the blueprints and the realization of the tablet on a mass scale at the advertised price. As of March 2013, DataWind had still been unable to deliver the first batch of 100,000 devices to the Indian government, partly because of disputes over the details of the contract and delays in payments made to DataWind, and partly because of bickering between the Indian engineering institutes

At one point, it even seemed that the Aakash would have more of a long-term presence in Indian courts than in schools. Last week, the Indian Institute of Technology in Bombay announced that it was charging DataWind an "0.5 per cent penalty per week for delayed delivery."

With no devices to hand out, the ministry was left red-faced, and had to scale back on its plans to order 5 million tablets. The initial batch received savage customer reviews that pointed out the many problems created by sloppy design and cost-cutting. Meanwhile, other manufacturers have begun to make low-cost tablets with better specs than Aakash.

Many well-informed observers in India's tech world think it would make sense for the government to abandon the Aakash project. In "What Went Wrong With the Aakash Tablet," the journalist Seema Singh wrote in Forbes India about the project's impractical top-down approach and unfeasible obsession with price at the eventual cost of minimal quality. In another piece, Singh asked last year:
"What is Indian about it? Which Indian institution or Indian company has done its two bit to call it an innovation? Does the battery last for a full college day, since it is meant for college students? Or does it charge under the sun? Or is it designed to help a student read the problem and work out the solution? Has it been ‘engineered’ for education?"

And in a biting report in Fast Company last July, April Rabkin provided a tour of the sites associated with the project and interviewed many of the leading figures behind it. Rabkin listened to plenty of high-minded blather and cant as she negotiated a maze of bureaucrats, but couldn't lay her hands on a single Aakash tablet:

"One afternoon in Mumbai, I visit the city's largest electronics hub, Lamington Road, to gauge the state of the nation's computer-manufacturing industry. I stop to chat with Bimal Jhaveri, who owns Hardtrac Computer Services, a chain of 11 retail stores that sell laptops, desktops, and tablets. Not a single product in Hardtrac's inventory is made in India. `India has never invested in computer-hardware manufacturing,' he says. `It's always promoted software. The government would need to help manufacturers with land and tax breaks.'

"…The Aakash has become an object lesson in the Indian government's ability to create great expectations and its inability to deliver on them. The bold overpromise and subsequent underdelivery says a lot about not only India's managerial and technical shortcomings but also the desire of its politicians and media to promote a story of India as a rising superpower."

Last month, the new minister of human resource development, Pallam Raju, seemed to accept this, criticizing the "obsession with hardware" that marked recent thinking about innovation in education. "Aakash is only a tablet, he said. "There are other such devices as well." The Indian Express reported that the ministry had decided to delay its tender for 5 million Aakash tablets and had created two committees to review the project.

But Sibal, who had taken much of the credit for the project, and who now holds the post of minister of communications and information technology, shot back:
"`I don't want to comment on a distinguished colleague of mine. I only know that as far as we are concerned Aakash is alive and kicking. For me, it will provide the platform for the future and not just for children but for all citizens of India.'"

The Aakash debacle wouldn't be so tragic if all it revealed was the Indian government's misguided attempt to use economies of scale to make computing technology widely available at a low price. After all, the government hasn't made a huge investment; all that it did was circulate a tender for the production of the device by a third party. For every tablet it does manage to sell eventually, it will absorb a loss of $10-15 -- hardly a black hole compared with the cost of corruption.

What is most problematic and Panglossian about the project is the confidence with which it was presented as the solution to widespread structural deficits in education in India, especially primary education. It's the vision of the tablet as teacher, miraculously allowing millions of students to work their way into knowledge and empowerment, that's most flawed and dangerous. Aakash might be a case study of what the writer Evgeny Morozov calls the folly of "solutionism," or the idea there is a fairly simple technological fix for any human problem. In "Tablets and a Lesson To Learn," Meeta Sengupta wrote last December:

"A tablet cannot supplant a teacher. An absent teacher is a different problem and throwing content via textbooks or shiny devices at it does not resolve that fundamental issue. The issue of content for pedagogical engagement is crucial to the discussion on a technology solution to upgrade the quality of education."
Perhaps the best that can be said about Aakash is that it has alerted manufacturers to the vast demand in India for low-cost computing devices. While doomed to failure on its own terms, it has stimulated the market in a productive way.

A more depressing conclusion, however, is that Aakash was, and continues to be, a faddish attempt by an influential faction in the Indian government to bridge the country's perceived "digital divide." And this was possibly done to distract the world, and themselves, from the reality that in almost seven decades the Indian state hasn't even been able to bridge the literacy divide between its rich and its poor. Solving that preliminary problem requires commitments made by human beings to other human beings -- and not just to technology or tablets.

(Chandrahas Choudhury, a novelist, is the New Delhi correspondent for World View. Follow him on Twitter. The opinions expressed are his own.)

To contact the author of this blog post:
Chandrahas Choudhury at Chandrahas.choudhury@gmail.com
To contact the editor responsible for this post:
Max Berley at mberley@bloomberg.net