The Simputer project was conceived during the organization
of the Global Village, an International Seminar on Information
Technology for Developing Countries in 1998. The Seminar
highlighted the point that the key to bridging the digital
divide is to have shared devices that permit truly simple
and natural user interfaces based on sight, touch and sound.
A challenge was made to develop a low-cost, easily available
device that would deliver local-language and icon-based
IT access to the masses.
Project Description
A joint effort of the Indian Institute of Science and a
Bangalore-based software company took up the challenge and
developed the Simputer - named as a short form for Simple,
Inexpensive and Multilingual. The device has an iconic interface,
touch-sensitive screen and text-to-speech features in different
Indian languages. Consequently, for the first time, non-literate
users can browse the web using pictures and the text-to-speech
capability allows the web content to be delivered in local
languages. The device is expected to cost approximately
$200.
While resembling a PDA, the device is much more powerful
with an Intel strong-arm chip, a GNU/Linux operating system
and 32MB RAM. The inclusion of a smart card reader and the
extensive use of audio in the form of text-to-speech and
audio snippets also distinguish the device from a PDA.
The Information Markup Language (IML) was created to suit
the unique needs and purpose of the Simputer. Referred to
by some as the "Illiterate" Markup Language it
was designed to provide the following features:
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Uniformity across diverse applications
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Ease of use
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Support for multilingual text and
speech output
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Support for smart card usage
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Transparent access to remote/local
resources
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Ease of application development
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Use of Internet standards
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Platform independence t
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Application development for the Simputer can be done on any
platform: linux, windows, solaris, MacOS. This is because
any Simputer application can be viewed as a black box that
reads in IML and outputs IML.
Finally, given the unreliable sources of electricity for
the rural poor, the Simputer was designed to run on AAA
rechargeable batteries or the mains.
Simputer Trust
The Simputer developers established Simputer Trust, a non-profit
organization, in order to fulfill the catalytic vision of
taking IT benefits to the rural masses. The Trust is described
as "a coming together of academics and technologists
from industry with a broad imperative of harnessing the
potential of the Simputer for the benefit of all sections
of society. The vision is to promote the Simputer, not as
an end product but as an evolving platform for social change."
The Simputer Trust will license the device's design and
software to manufacturers for mass production but keep a
tight control on specifications to maintain standards. The
device makers can modify the design but must pool back the
changes to the trust after having a one-year head start
in commercially using the modifications. A one-time license
fee will cost US$25,000 for firms in developing countries
and US$250,000 for those in developed countries. Funds from
licensing will be ploughed back into research and development.
As with any IT hardware, useful applications rather cost
alone will drive the demand and determine the success of
the Simputer. The needs of the rural poor and the market
opportunities in serving them are unfamiliar to most software
developers and entrepreneurs. The work of the Trustees is
to encourage software developers, entrepreneurs, development
agencies, nonprofit organizations and others to activate
the potential of the tool they have provided. Their role
is to educate market developers to meet the unfamiliar needs
of the rural poor. For instance, they note that the SmartCard
feature that the Simputer provides enables the Simputer
to be marketed to and shared by a whole community. In fact,
since Smart Card technology allows for personal information
management, a very large number of individuals can benefit
from a single device. (This is a completely foreign concept
to traditional market-development professionals.) A local
community such as the village panchayat, the village school,
a kiosk, a village postman, or even a shopkeeper should
be able to loan the device to individuals for different
uses. Applications in diverse sectors such as micro banking,
health data collection, agricultural information gathering
and dissemination are just a few anticipated.
The Trustees are Vijay Chandru (IISc), Vinay Deshpande
(Managing Trustee, Encore), Shashank Garg (Encore), Ramesh
Hariharan (IISc), Swami Manohar (IISc), Mark Mathias (Encore),
and V Vinay (IISc). Rahul Matthan (Trilegal).
Thunderbird, AGSIM students based upon information supplied
by Digital Partners and/or the ventures themselves wrote all
cases. We have tried in all instances to highlight the most
important points from the information provided. Please note
that this document is being circulated without formal editing
which will be done after the conference. We would like to
acknowledge the following Thunderbird students for their work
in preparing the cases: Dennis Hall, Srikanth Madala, Hammad
Rizwan, Steen Simonsen, Ryan Timms, David Feige, and Stephen
Frail.
Obstacles
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Getting
the Simputer Manufactured
Simputer Trust will not undertake the manufacture
and distribution of the Simputer. The trustees have
decided against the traditional models of technology
development and deployment, which they believe have
restricted the benefits to the few. Instead they have
decided make Simputer's hardware specifications available
on the web and to provide very generous licensing
provisions as partially described above. Multiple
manufactures are desired as this would help minimize
the cost of the hardware for the consumer.
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Getting
Applications Developed
Low hardware costs should lower one of the barriers
to application development. Still, rural villagers
with unfamiliar needs and a variety of languages may
still not sound like a market prime ready for a "killer
app." Nevertheless the reality is that the market
is huge, the needs are great and IT technology now
allows profitable markets to be developed that could
not have been imagined even a few years ago. Governments,
development agencies, entrepreneurs, non-profit organizations
and others are well positioned to become the new "market
developers" serving the underserved. Getting
sufficient content or data developed in local languages
may initially require some education and effort by
those most familiar with the needs of the rural poor.
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Making
it Truly Affordable
$200 may still be too high for poor communities. The
hope is that government and large multilateral organizations
will use the Simputer as a platform, indirectly making
it affordable for poor communities to get access to
Simputers. SmartCard has been added as a prime method
of enabling the "sharing" of such devices.
Rural communities could own several devices and hire
these out for usage to individuals based on the ownership
of a SmartCard.
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Reparability
No provision has been made for the reparability of
the devices yet. Manufacturers may provide some service.
As Simputers proliferate, it can also be expected
that entrepreneurs will fill the demand for spare
parts, repair, and maintenance. "In developing
countries nothing is 'throwaway."
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Impact
The Simputer was formally "launched" on April 26th
of 2001. At the event, Vijay Chandru, a professor at the Indian
Institute of Science and one of the trustees, stated, "the
Simputer is essentially an empowering device," and T-shirts
declared "Radical simplicity for universal access."
Obviously it is too early to measure the impact of the Simputer,
but with such sentiments, the potential implications for the
rural poor are profound.
For more information contact:
Email: simputer@csa.iisc.ernet.in
Thunderbird, AGSIM students based upon information supplied
by Digital Partners and/or the ventures themselves wrote all
cases. We have tried in all instances to highlight the most
important points from the information provided. Please note
that this document is being circulated without formal editing
which will be done after the conference. We would like to
acknowledge the following Thunderbird students for their work
in preparing the cases: Dennis Hall, Srikanth Madala, Hammad
Rizwan, Steen Simonsen, Ryan Timms, David Feige, and Stephen
Frail.