The idea was, and still is, captivating: in 2011, the Indian government and two Indian-born tech entrepreneurs unveiled a $50 tablet computer, to be built in India with Google's free Android software. The government would buy the computers by the millions and give them to its schoolchildren.
But as Pamposh Raina, Ian Austen and Heather Timmons report, it has become increasingly evident that the brothers behind the tablet project are unable to deliver on most of their ambitious promises.
Enthusiasts saw the plan as a way to bring modern touch-screen computing to some of the world's poorest people while seeding a technology manufacturing industry in India. Legions of customers placed advance orders for a commercial version of the tablet, thrilled at the prospect of owning tangible proof that India was a leader in âfrugal innovation.â
Stoking expectations was Suneet Singh Tuli, the charismatic C.E.O. of the small London-based company that won the bid. âI am creating a product at a lower price than anyone else in the world with the hope that it impacts people's lives and I make money out of it,â he said in a recent interview.
But the Tulis acknowledge that their company, DataWind, will not even come close to shipping the 100,000 tablets it has promised to India's colleges and universities before its year-end deadline. Most of the 10,000 or so tablets delivered through early December were made in China, despite the company's early pledge to manufacture in India. Financial statements filed with British regulators show that the company is deeply in the red.
And the project's entire premise - that India can make a cheap tablet computer that will somehow make up for failures of the country's crippled education system - is fundamentally flawed, according to some experts in education and manufacturing.