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Will Cheap Computer Bridge India's Digital Divide?

Indian students pose with the supercheap Aakash tablet computers, which they received during the Oct. 5 product launch in New Delhi. The Indian government intends to deliver 10 million tablets to college students across India at a subsidized price of $35.
Gurinder Osan
/
AP
Indian students pose with the supercheap Aakash tablet computers, which they received during the Oct. 5 product launch in New Delhi. The Indian government intends to deliver 10 million tablets to college students across India at a subsidized price of $35.

India has unveiled what its government says is the world's cheapest tablet computer, along with a promise to make the device available to the country's college students, and possibly, to those in high school as well. The government says it's a major step toward bridging the country's gigantic digital divide.

The tablet is called "Aakash," the Hindi word for "sky," and boosters say it could give Internet access to billions of people.

The Aakash was developed for the government by Datawind, a London-based company founded by two brothers from India's Punjab state.

"We've been focused on the digital divide for a long time," says Suneet Singh Tuli, Datawind's CEO. "We have always felt that if you could reduce the cost of the device and the cost of Internet access, then the opportunity is huge."

Where the people are unable to access the simple education, unable to access even the drinking water in this country, they cannot afford this technology.

Tuli says the government was looking to reduce the price to a level that seemed impossible at first: about $35. At the time, he says, the cheapest device his company offered cost $80 just to manufacture.

On the other hand, the potential market was enormous.

"These guys want the lowest of the low-cost devices, and most important, they're putting a lot of financial muscle towards making it happen," Tuli recalls. "They're saying we're going to buy 10 million of them in the first phase."

That's what it would take to offer a tablet for sale to every college and university student in India. In the second phase, he says, the government wants to expand the program to grades nine through 12, or about 80 million students.

Tuli is a tall man who wears a blue Sikh turban and a long beard that covers much of his necktie. The Aakash fits neatly into the span of his two hands as he demonstrates its features: a resistive touch screen, Wi-Fi and video conferencing capabilities. It has an SD card slot, two USB ports, a 600 MHz processor, 256MB RAM and runs Android 2.2.

Tuli says it has a battery life of about three hours, crucial in areas that don't have reliable electricity.

The Aakash tablet computer (shown here during its Oct. 5 launch in New Delhi) can be used for functions like word processing, Web browsing and video conferencing. It has a battery life of about three hours.
Gurinder Osan / AP
/
AP
The Aakash tablet computer (shown here during its Oct. 5 launch in New Delhi) can be used for functions like word processing, Web browsing and video conferencing. It has a battery life of about three hours.

The Issue Of Cost

Datawind is selling the Aakash to the government for about $50 apiece. In turn, the government is looking to subsidize enough of the cost to make it available to students at about $35, not much more than the cost of a fairly basic mobile phone.

But cost is still at the heart of most complaints about the Aakash, from people who say the government is buying expensive gadgetry when it should be addressing the real problem: that India's education system is a mess.

"Where the people are unable to access the simple education, unable to access even the drinking water in this country, they cannot afford this technology," says Manoj Kumar Jena, a professor of sociology at Jamia Millia Islamia University in New Delhi.

In a country where three-quarters of the population lives on less than $2 a day, he says, even a $10 tablet would be too expensive.

Jena says the government should be investing in improving schools at the most basic level before it sinks a lot of money into distributing technology.

But it's going to take a long time for India to train teachers and build adequate schools for all of its 500 million school-age children, says N.K. Sinha, an assistant secretary at India's Ministry of Human Resource and Development, which led the effort to develop the low-cost tablet.

Every parent in this country, their dream is to educate their kid, and they will take advantage of the Internet if they have access to it. All we're doing is making it accessible.

"How do we reach everyone?" Sinha asks. "The volumes are so large. Through what brick-and-mortar structure could one reach all 500 million? In what time frame? At what cost?"

He sees the Aakash as way to leapfrog over the problem of improving local schools, at least temporarily.

Sinha says the tablets will give students access to Internet-based instruction, along with all the resources of the Web.

Making The Education Dream Possible

Tuli, the Datawind executive, says he thinks the devices will win acceptance from an Indian public that embraced mobile phones, despite the problems of cost and even limited electricity.

India now has more than 800 million mobile phone subscribers in a country of about 1.2 billion people.

Tuli thinks that if Indian parents believe the Aakash tablet can give their children a better shot at getting an education, they'll use that same kind of ingenuity to buy it.

"Every parent in this country, their dream is to educate their kid, and they will take advantage of the Internet if they have access to it," Tuli says. "All we're doing is making it accessible."

The Indian government says it's committed to making sure that all the students who receive the Aakash tablets will have access to the Internet.

That may not be so hard at first, given that the first 10 million recipients are already at colleges and universities that have electricity and Internet. But it's going to become increasingly challenging as the government tries to expand the program to lower grades and less developed schools.

Copyright 2020 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Corey Flintoff is a correspondent with the Foreign Desk. His career has taken him to more than 45 countries.Since 2005, Flintoff has been part of the NPR team covering the Iraq War. He has embedded with U.S. military units fighting insurgents and hunting roadside bombs. His stories from Iraq have dealt with sectarian killings, government corruption, the Christian refugee crisis, and the destruction of Iraq's southern marshes.