Sunday, July 19, 2015

305 - IIT-B, Nehru Science Centre to bring internet to rural schools across state - Indian Epress

The initiative is being launched as part of ‘Techfest’, the annual science and technology festival of IIT Bombay.


Written by Mihika Basu | Mumbai | Updated: July 16, 2015 2:16 am

To provide hands-on internet experience to students in rural schools, IIT Bombay is collaborating with the Nehru Science Centre in which volunteers trained by the students and faculty of IIT Bombay will show how content can be accessed with a click. The “internet for all” project, which is being piloted at 26 rural schools in Nashik district and was launched Tuesday, will be a facility incorporated in Nehru Science Centre’s mobile science exhibition bus and will cover a distance of 650 km. The aim is to literally take internet to the doorsteps of students studying in remote parts of the state.

“Conventional education is extremely rigid with little scope for creative thinking. Such outside syllabus exposure is the need of the day to motivate students. We need to tell students, who have no idea about the internet, that there’s something called connectivity and web pages, how the net works, how browser works. Digital divide, in my opinion, could be worse than social divide,” said IIT Bombay Professor D B Phatak.

The initiative is being launched as part of ‘Techfest’, the annual science and technology festival of IIT Bombay, which is scheduled to be held in December this year. Phatak also said that by year-end, an executable plan for scaling up the project will be ready, which can include net capsules in multiple languages. “As connectivity progresses to villages, we should already have children who know how to use the internet,” he added.

According to Professor Phatak, after accessing Marathi sites with interesting content, the latter was downloaded on a single server, which can simulate several servers.

Each bus will have three volunteers, a laptop with Wi-Fi connectivity and five Aakash tablets. “All tablets will be connected to the laptop and students will be able to access meaningful content in Marathi. They will first see the science exhibits on the bus and subsequently experience the internet. Taking a cue from this project, we are planning to scale it up. We can have 20 such buses, 20 laptops, 100 Aakash tablets and internet capsules or content can be created in multiple local languages. The only bottleneck could be selection and training of volunteers for the project,” he said.
The mobile science exhibition is an exhibition on wheels in which 20 theme-based models are mounted on a specially designed bus and was started in 1965. It is the flagship rural outreach science education programme of the National Council of Science Museums (NCSM). Currently, NCSM has a fleet of 20 such buses, attached to various science centres across India.
The exhibition remains on tours for six to seven months in a year in two phases and covers upto 50 sites in each phase. The idea is to enthuse students to take up careers in science and technology and the bus remains in a rural school for two days at each site.
“The bus will travel to rural areas fully equipped with equipments and infrastructure. Besides giving hands-on internet experience, volunteers will be responsible for educating rural school students about the power …continued »
- See more at: http://indianexpress.com/article/cities/mumbai/iit-b-nehru-science-centre-to-bring-internet-to-rural-schools-across-state/#sthash.81SxWJFy.dpuf

Friday, July 17, 2015

304 - India's low cost 'Aakash' tablet project closed in March - Hindustan Times

  • HT Correspondent, Hindustan Times, New Delhi| Updated: Jul 12, 2015 22:40 IST
An RTI query has revealed that India's low cost tablet project 'Aakash' was closed down in March 2015.

“The Aakash project at IIT Bombay was closed on 31st March, 2015, after successfully completing all targets. Specifications for future upgraded version has been submitted to the government. IIT Bombay is not in knowledge of future plans," IIT Bombay said in a reply to the RTI query.


Initially, IIT Rajasthan was entrusted with the project, which it returned to Ministry of Human Resource Development. The project then went to IIT Bombay and since then the institute had been overseeing it.

Other than procuring one lakh devices, the other targets including its sample testing in labs and establishment of over 300 Aakash centres which were engineering colleges across the country were also achieved, it said.

A total of Rs 47.72 crores was approved for the project and this amount has been spent to achieve the targets, the reply said.

Wednesday, July 1, 2015

303 - Aakash tablet-maker Datawind launches new tablet for Rs 4,999 with one year unlimited free Internet - IBN Live


Posted on: 06:31 PM IST Jun 30, 2015

New Delhi: Canadian mobile device company Datawind launched UbiSlate 7C+x tablet for Rs 4,999 in India with one year unlimited free internet in partnership with Reliance Communications.

"Today we have extended unlimited free internet offer on our tablet UbiSlate 7C+x on GSM network of Reliance Communications. We are assembling it at our Amritsar plant. It will have a separate Facebook and email application for convenience of user to access them free under the plan," Datawind President and CEO Suneet Singh Tuli told PTI.



Canadian mobile device company Datawind launched UbiSlate 7C+x tablet for Rs 4,999 in India with one year unlimited free internet in partnership with Reliance Communications.

The dual-SIM Android tablet comes with a microUSB powered Keyboard. It is available on Naaptol's TV, print and online shopping platforms starting today and will be available with other channels partners of Datawind in a week. The tablet supports voice calling feature and comes with dual core, dual VGA camera both at front and back and 4G internal flash storage which is expandable up to 32 GB.

Customer buying this tablet will be able to access website without incurring any mobile internet charge if they access them through Datawind's patent UbiSurfer browser installed on it. However, they will need to pay data charges if they access it from other browsers.

When asked if it violates net neutrality principles, Tuli said, "It is perfectly net neutral. We are not discriminating among websites. Customers can access any website through our patent UbiSurfer. We are working on an advertisement based revenue model as we now want to be known as company that provides free internet, not just as low cost device maker."

He said UbiSurfer has technology that compresses data consumed while internet surfing and reduces cost of data.
"It is good for web access but experience will not pleasant for video streaming," Tuli added. The company is also ramping up its manufacturing capacity in India following increase of excise duty on mobile phones and tablets.

"We have set up assembly line that have capacity of making 2 lakh units per month. We are also in talks with contract manufacturer for setting up additional facility," Tuli said.

302 - Aakash maker DataWind offering free Internet on all its devices - India Today



The super cheap Aakash tablet manufacturer DataWind on Tuesday announced that it will provide free unlimited Internet browsing for one year on all its devices.  The free internet browsing offer will however be available on the Reliance Communications GSM network. 

The low cost Internet connectivity and wireless web access products provider has collaborated with Naaptol to launch the UbiSlate 7C+x  which consists of one UbiSlate 7C+: a dual-SIM 7-inch Android tablet and one microUSB powered keyboard with cover. The whole package comes at a price of Rs.4,999 and will be available on Naaptol's TV, print and online shopping platforms starting Tuesday.

"The overwhelming response and the resultant customer feedback from the recent launch of PocketSurfer smartphone helped us take this decision.  Starting today, Internet browsing access if going to be free on our entire range and we will be offering this special value offer with Naaptol as our strategic partners in growth," Suneet Singh Tuli, president and CEO, DataWind said.

The free-access does not include audio and video streaming or local-downloads, which can alternatively be accessed by topping-up using market plans, informed the company.
DataWind is best known for its Aakash tablets that were primarily intended for educational purposes and distributed free of cost to students in government colleges and universities under the Congress-led UPA regime. The project was part of the then government of India's ambitious plan to link 25,000 colleges and 400 universities through an e-learning program.

Sadly, the project did not pick up the kind of steam that the government had initially hoped for, and it was later cancelled.