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Putting Aakash within reach of Pak Children

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Putting Aakash within the reach of Pakistani children - DAWN.COM

When it comes to what children can dream to achieve, the sky (Aakash) should be the limit. But this may not be possible with disease, hunger, and poverty robbing children in the developing world of hope and potential. A $50 tablet computer though can improve their odds.

Suneet Singh Tuli believes his invention can level the playing field for children in developing countries. Mr. Tuli’s $50 tablet computer, which runs on the Andriod operating system and is charged by a built-in solar charger, in four hours, can expose children in developing countries to the same resources enjoyed by others in the developed world. More importantly, he is willing to build and distribute his tablet computers in Pakistan.

A laptop in the hands of every school going child seems like an impossible goal, especially when its price exceeds the monthly, and in some cases, the annual household income. This has contributed to the great digital divide between the rich and the poor. Mr. Tuli’s tablet computers (named Aakash by the Indian government, and commercially sold as ‘UbiSlate’ by Datawind) can help bridge the divide. Governments in developing countries (in Pakistan, read Shahbaz Sharif) should take note.

05SnxOr.jpg


Mr. Tuli posing with Aakash.

Millions of children in Pakistan who should be in school are not. Those who are fortunate to attend schools are receiving inadequate education with teachers imparting a curriculum laced with errors. The Internet, the world’s largest library, allows learners to research and have a second opinion on curriculum. A $50 tablet computer can put a library in reach of hundreds of millions in the developing world.

Mr. Tuli’s company, DataWind, aims to disrupt the education landscape for the three billion at the bottom of the pyramid. I met him earlier in the week when he visited Ryerson University. “I am willing to build the laptop in Pakistan to provide local economic benefits, in addition to making an affordable technology available to the next generation of learners”, he told me. DataWind supports domestic manufacturing in countries that adopt its products.

With endorsement from the UN for his award winning innovation, one would think that governments will be queuing up to get this product in the hands of learners. Surprisingly, only a dozen or so countries have done so to date. It appears that bureaucracies in developing countries have decided to stand between the opportunities and those hungry for learning and scholarship.
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Mr. Tuli with Ban Ki Moon holding Aakash.


Mr. Tuli, a civil engineering graduate from the University of Toronto, grew up in Alberta. Between him and his brother, they hold several patents that are likely to create many more innovative solutions for learners. His motivation for his tablet computer: “I want the same opportunities for other children that I have for mine.”

Many have erroneously compared Aakash with the iPad and other more expensive laptops and have then come up with a long list of what Aakash may not be able to do. Such comparisons are misplaced, to say the least. First, Aakash is not designed to be the iPad killer. Instead, it is designed to put affordable computing in the hands of those who will otherwise have no chance of getting on the information highway. Second, iPad and its competitors are designing products for the conspicuous consumers where profit is the primary motive. Aakash is aimed at improving literacy across the globe.

The other part of the learning puzzle is access to the Internet. That’s where the governments can play their role. Why not revive libraries as a learning resource for the masses. Make education a priority and put in place a library for every 200,000 people. Instead of stocking shelves with books, the libraries should provide seating space, electricity, inexpensive Internet, and tablet computers on loan to be used within the library.

Every library in the public school system, though few exist, could be used for the purpose. At the same time, space could be repurposed from public schools and colleges for the same. Even the private sector could be mobilised to build libraries that the government can partly subsidise and the rest can come from user fees.

Mr. Tulli’s DataWind is working on solutions to provide cheap Internet. Their research team in Canada has devised methods to reduce network load and improve speed by 10-times for mobile network data.

Despite their demonstrated success with innovation, Mr. Tuli and Aakash have their supporters and detractors. However, Mr. Tuli or Aakash should not be the focus. Instead, the focus should be on providing quality education through innovative means to those who cannot do so otherwise.

An affordable tablet computer for the average household has a far greater chance of improving learning than the pricey laptops provincial governments have been doling out in Pakistan. With technologies like Aakash, the sky comes closer to those want to reach it.
 
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Commercial one (Ubislate)is being sold for more than $50 in India and I got mine recently. Only the subsidized ones will be for $50 or less depending on the rebate offer from the Indian govt. Anyway it is good initiative from Indian govt. to make it available to Indian students at a decent price point. DataWind has come a long way to resolve the issues with respect to Aakash. It will be up to Pakistani govt. but I have my doubts if they will promote a Indian company.
 
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Commercial one (Ubislate)is being sold for more than $50 in India and I got mine recently. Only the subsidized ones will be for $50 or less depending on the rebate offer from the Indian govt. Anyway it is good initiative from Indian govt. to make it available to Indian students at a decent price point. DataWind has come a long way to resolve the issues with respect to Aakash. It will be up to Pakistani govt. but I have my doubts if they will promote a Indian company.

They could make a JV with a local company

More than nationality, education is what matters.
 
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Commercial one (Ubislate)is being sold for more than $50 in India and I got mine recently. Only the subsidized ones will be for $50 or less depending on the rebate offer from the Indian govt. Anyway it is good initiative from Indian govt. to make it available to Indian students at a decent price point. DataWind has come a long way to resolve the issues with respect to Aakash. It will be up to Pakistani govt. but I have my doubts if they will promote a Indian company.
how much did you buy it for. Is it good?
 
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I doubt if it will ever reach pakistan.
 
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how much did you buy it for. Is it good?

I got for Rs.5199.00 including s/h. It is quite good for the price it is offered. I am not going to compare it to my IPad which is 8 times its price.
 
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They could make a JV with a local company

More than nationality, education is what matters.



Sir @Zarvan and Sir @RazPaK will have different opinion...
@Topic: If I would have been Pakistani, Rather than buying it from Datawind, I would have contacted chinese and assembled it locally in Pakistan. (The Hardware of Akash are bought from China and asian countries then it was assempled by Indian company)

I got for $5199.00 including s/h. It is quite good for the price it is offered. I am not going to compare it to my IPad which is 8 times its price.




5 grand?? means 3 Lakhs???
 
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They could make a JV with a local company

More than nationality, education is what matters.

They are quite smart touting this tablet as an educational gadget but it is much more than that. You have to get special access to get to the educational content which is not available to general public. I don't know yet how much of work has been done to promote education material thru this device. My son's school has decided to do away with text books for tablets. All his text books will be downloaded to his tablet. Added benefit is he will have lighter backpack to carry.

You mean INR not US$ right ???

sorry, my mistake. It is INR 5199.00
 
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china maal hai kya fir se? pichli baar bhi congi sarkaar ne badey lochey kare thay. even 2guysnextdoor knos abt it. :D

achha hua mey ban ki moon kaun hai ye baat jaanta hu, nai toh pakka china maal ka doubt aata. :s
 
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Now pakistanis will have ego problem , ? ?

here already laptop assembly deal signed……
and HP I-3 are distributed free to all top 100s in all boards in punjab and all who got 70%+ marks getting in university……
So I actually don't see any need of this in education sector unless GOP consider teaching on tablets to all school students which would be revolution and this can be assmbled here with sone quality improvements increasing its prize to RS/-10,000 and in this prize locally tablets are available……:yu:
 
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