The Brooklyn Voice  
The Brooklyn Voice Last update 076/238/2010

"The world's cheapest computer" will cost just under 35 Dollar

The arms race on the cheapest technology is in full swing. Indians built a car that cost 2000 dollars. Massachuttes Institute of Technology, MIT, the U.S. launched a computer for a hundred dollars.

India's Human Resource Development Minister Kapil Sibal this week unveiled the low-cost computing device that is designed for students, saying his department had started talks with global manufacturers to start mass production.


"We have reached a (developmental) stage that today, the motherboard, its chip, the processing, connectivity, all of them cumulatively cost around $35, including memory, display, everything," he told a news conference.
He said the touch screen gadget was packed with Internet browsers, PDF reader and video conferencing facilities but its hardware was created with sufficient flexibility to incorporate new components according to user requirement.


Sibal said the Linux based computing device was expected to be introduced to higher education institutions from 2011 but the aim was to drop the price further to $20 and ultimately to $10.
The device was developed by research teams at India's premier technological institutes, the Indian Institute of Technology and the Indian Institute of Science.


India spends about three percent of its annual budget on school education and has improved its literacy rates to over 64 percent of its 1.2 billion population but studies have shown many students can barely read or write and most state-run schools have inadequate facilities.

(Reporting by Reuters Television, Editing by Belinda Goldsmith)

India develops world's cheapest "laptop" at $35

Indian Minister Kapil Sibal shows off touch screen computer that will be the "host lens cheapest laptop”. According to Kapil Sibal, the budget-IPAD developed for students.
Photo: REUTER