gadgetPhreak Gadget News Blog. Futuristic Gadgets and Portable Electronics

July 27, 2006

OLPC update: India isn’t buying

Filed under: india,negroponte,olpc — Paul Miller @ 8:52 pm

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It's not like we expected every developing country in the world to jump at the chance to blow $100 million on the minimum order of Negroponte's pull-string powered laptops, but India sure did seem a logical fit. With their burgeoning tech economy, it would seem training a new generation of tech support personnel engineers and programmers would be a priority well met by the OLPC, but the Indian Ministry of Education busted out the vocab and called the laptop "pedagogically suspect." They seemed to think the funds were better suited for building classrooms and hiring teachers, not "fancy tools," and their reasoning is hard to fault in that regard. Education Secretary Sudeep Banerjee also questioned the maturity of Negroponte's plan, and said no major country was seriously interested. Of course, Nigeria just ordered up a cool million, and places like China, Brazil, Argentina, Egypt and Thailand are still likely targets, but it looks like India is content to wait on the sidelines and call sour grapes for now.
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July 2, 2006

Indian firm boils the mobile phone down to basics

Filed under: MiniMobile,children,elderly,firefly,india,migo,mini mobile,simple — Chris Ziegler @ 7:11 pm

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What if you were to take the mobile phone concept and strip away every conceivable nonessential feature. What would you be left with? The Migo, you say? The Firefly, perhaps? Not even; both of those devices have luxuries like selectable ringtones and displays. India’s National Institute of Design has devised the “Mini Mobile,” which bears a strong resemblance to a remote control but actually functions as an ultra-simplified phone. We can recite the entire spec sheet to you in three words: three speed dials. That’s it. No GPS, no display, no dedicated emergency button. (Technically, there are dedicated buttons to send and end calls, though we don’t consider those features.) No word on production plans, but the firm is shopping the design around to manufacturers, arguing that a no-nonsense device will appeal to parents and the elderly. One recommendation, guys: the five randomly placed, identical buttons sorta go against your design principle.

[Via I4U News]

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May 18, 2006

India announces plans to develop robot army

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In an announcement that you can probably expect to be repeated by rival Pakistan in the next few days, Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has claimed that his South Asian nation will be the latest country to pursue technologies for developing a robotic army. Singh's remarks came during the inauguration of a new building for the Defence Research and Development Organization, and were part of a larger speech outlining the country's future plans for military research, where he also mentioned interest in developing next-gen propulsion, camouflage, and precision guided munitions systems. Unlike South Korea's planned army of killbots (pictured), the Indian program is pretty light on specifics so far, although we do know that the impetus for the project comes from the realization that "trans-national actors and unconventional forces" pose a growing threat when compared to the risk of a traditional inter-state conflict.

[Via Robot Gossip]
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April 15, 2006

Indian politicians are texting for votes

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align="right" src="http://www.dvguru.com/media/2006/04/indiacell.jpg" alt="" />Although we doubt the practice would
go over well here in the pay-by-the-message US, Indian politicians have apparently embraced texting in a big way, using
SMS as a new way to reach voters in response to a crackdown on campaigning methods. The Hindu is reporting that recent
restrictions on traditional campaign signage such as wall posters and graffiti have prompted candidates for the May 8
Assembly elections to find new avenues of reaching the electorate, with many taking advantage of free SMS and MMS
services to send brief slogans, issue positions, and even pictures of themselves and their party’s symbol. This new
tactic by politicos follows a more general Indian trend of information distribution via text message, with political
parties already notifying journalists of their officials’ schedules and impending press conferences by SMS.
/>[Via textually]

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April 7, 2006

HP provides deets on gesture keyboard

Filed under: gesture,hindi,hp,india,keyboard,south asia — Marc Perton @ 8:34 am

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hspace="4" border="1" align="right" src="http://www.engadget.com/media/2006/04/hpgesturekeybd.jpg" alt="" />HP just
let loose with some more info on href="http://www.engadget.com/2006/03/17/hp-indias-gesture-keyboard-for-pen-entry/">that gesture keyboard the
company showed off in India a couple of weeks ago.  According to HP, the keypad, which was developed by the
company’s Bangalore-based research team, can reproduce the script used in Hindi and other Indic languages, a process
that would require up to 1,000 keys using a traditional keyboard (though most keyboards designed for such languages
rely on keystroke combinations, rather than actual 1,000-key layouts). HP has begun selling the keypad in India for
about $45, including software. The device is being manufactured in India by a company HP declined to name. HP sees the
potential market for the keyboard as comprising up to 1.5 billion non-English speakers in India, Nepal and other South
Asian countries. At $45 a pop, that could make the keyboard a pretty lucrative product for HP.

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April 4, 2006

Engadget Podcast 074 – 04.04.06

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Podcast logo We pumped out a quick podcast for you while we're out at CTIA -- so if you're trying to steer clear of all the cellphone news that's about to hit, you'll be cool with what we've got going on in the show this week. We're taking on Movielink's and CinemaNow's big online distribution announcement from Monday, initial UMPC pricing, Intel's community PC, the South Korean robot invasion, and, of course, Naomi Campbell -- back on Engadget for once again bludgeoning an assistant with a cellphone. We'll also do our usual call-ins and occasional on-air gadget review; up this week is the Moto Q. Care to see how Verizon's long delayed QWERTY handheld stands up to the Engadget test? Better listen up.

Get the podcast

[iTunes] Subscribe to the Podcast directly in iTunes (MP3).
[RSS] Add the Engadget Podcast feed to your RSS aggregator and have the show delivered automatically (MP3).
[MP3] Download the show (MP3).
[AAC] Download the show (enhanced AAC).
[OGG] Download the show (OGG).
[Vote] Vote for us on Podcast Alley!

Hosts
Peter Rojas and Ryan Block

Producer
Randall Bennett

Music
J J J - 'Suits' in Japan

Format
52:41, 24.1 MB, MP3

Program
00:19 - Seven major studios line up to sell movies online
06:11 - TabletKiosk And Samsung reveal UMPC pricing
11:54 - Intel proposes "Community PC" for rural India
18:44 - South Korea wants 100% robot market penetration by 2020
22:01 - Naomi Campbell back in court for throwing another phone at assistant
24:01 - Hands on with Motorola Q
29:34 - Listener Voicemail
47:15 - CTIA and the week ahead

LISTEN (MP3)
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Contact the podcast: 1-888-ENGADGET, Engadget (Gizmo Project) or podcast at engadget dawt com

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February 8, 2012

CDMA phones to get ultra cheap, too

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Anyone else notice that most of the fanfare surrounding the concept of the almost-free unsubsidized handset has been largely restricted to the GSM camp? Sure, we have occasional CDMA examples like Kyocera’s K122 and K132 — but with all due respect to Kyocera, cooler looking GSM goodies like the MOTOFONE have been generating just a bit more buzz. No worries, though; a handful of scrappy Korean startups are looking to correct the imbalance, committing to deliver $30 handsets utilizing CDMA2000 1x radios (no EV-DO, we’re guessing) to India starting in December of this year with other Southeast Asian countries hopping on the bandwagon in ’07. According to Rose Telecom, one of the startups involved in the initiative, the phones should take another dive to the $20 mark in 2008. We can almost sense American prepaid MVNOs expressing interest already.

 

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Low-cost MOTOFONE hits India

Filed under: f3,f3c,india,international,markets,motofone,release,unveiled — Darren Murph @ 1:17 pm

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We knew Motorola had something (really) skinny up its sleeve way back in July, and after it got the ole thumbs-up from our constituents over at the FCC, we knew a whiz-bang release couldn’t be too far out. Thankfully (at least for India), today’s the day, and the MOTOFONE will finally find its way into (and surely out of) slim fit pockets everywhere. Moto announced immediate availability of the GSM-based F3 within India today at a dedicated event held in New Delhi, and stated that “international markets” could expect to get their palms on one “in the coming weeks.” Furthermore, the CDMA sibling (F3c) is slated to hit shelves “before the end of 2006.” While pricing details were cleverly omitted, we’re sure they’ll surface soon when local carriers jump on the bandwagon.

[Via Mobiledia]

 

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BOLD MOVES: THE FUTURE OF FORD Step behind the curtain at Ford Motor. Experience the documentary first-hand.

 
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