Simputer Available? 194
Anonymous Coward writes "The Simputer (marketed by PicoPeta, the inventors and manufactured by the Defence Electronics PSU - BEL) has a website now and is available for sale (including outside India). Some pics can be found at the picture gallery. This story has been discussed a few times before here at /. here, here and here. Of particular note are some of the features, notably the device goes beyond the typical handheld/PDA and has some brand new innovations. For instance, it uses accelerometers to sense motion and this is used to give commands to the computer (for instance, to zoom a picture, you just have to move the Simputer towards you and to turn a page, you flick it like you would turn a page for a book. Also has an integrated smart card reader plus writer, very useful for several business applications."
I hear (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I hear (Score:2, Insightful)
http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/busines
International Business Machines, the US computing and information technology services group, yesterday won a 10-year outsourcing contract worth up to $750m -- from an Indian company.
So, Is it time for Indians to start shouting "STOP US companies from stealing Indian jobs"???
Grow up!!
Re:I hear (Score:3, Interesting)
Most of that work will still be done in India.
Over-correction (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Over-correction (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Accelerometers @ ~$15 retail (Score:4, Informative)
You can get a 2-axis Analog Devices accelerometer kit for $19.50 for the Mark III mini-sumo robot at The Mark III Store [junun.org] (scroll down a page to the "Accelerometer Kit"). There's a handful of discrete components, and this is essentially a retail price, so figure $15.
The part is actually a MEMS device, so figure 1) a manufacturer can probably buy it at half that price in volume, and 2) there are cheaper non-MEMS devices available on the market.
Re:Accelerometers @ ~$15 retail (Score:2)
Their angular motion sensors are a bit pricier ($33/q100) and in a different package (BGA.. grr).
Re:Over-correction (Score:3, Funny)
Ah, but they don't have to pay to import it from India.
Re:Over-correction (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Over-correction (Score:4, Funny)
Amida: "I know this is a bad neighborhood and you are not wearing much, but we need you to pretent like you are using the product and you would do this in your free time."
Re:Over-correction (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Over-correction (Score:2)
Vehicles (Score:4, Insightful)
They had BETTER have an option to turn that off, or else it sure would make using it on a bus interesting.
Re:Vehicles (Score:2)
Re:Vehicles (Score:1)
Actually a negative change in speed would also count as acceleration.
Re:Vehicles (Score:1, Insightful)
Change in direction is also acceleration.
Re:Vehicles (Score:2, Funny)
I'm sceptical about... (Score:3, Interesting)
look at the modern mobile phones e.g. Sony Ericsson P900 5-way jog-wheel, that's an excellent example of innovation - very simple and very effective.
Re:I'm sceptical about... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I'm sceptical about... (Score:2)
I believe it was Jim Gettys who once pointed out that the accelerometers (which were in at least prototype iPaq sleeves) allow the device to keep the screen image right-side-up all the way to the ground :-). Put a paniced call for help on there for a poignant moment, and add an audio scream for effect.
Re:I'm sceptical about... (Score:1, Interesting)
How about simple and cheap as hell?
Now an accelerometer is just another surface feature on a chip. It's cheaper than a button.
The Perfect PDA for Your Robot (Score:1)
optical mice (Score:2)
Accelerometers may sound spiffy today, but in reality, it's just a special process applied to the chips & can be made in bulk. The lack of dust openings and the ability to integrate into other chips may also make it cheaper in the long run.
Re:optical mice (Score:1)
e.g. turning pages by turning the PDA seems "intuitive", but what about when you turn the PDA to show someone else or for any other reason? imo, compared with something like a mouse wheel or a touch-screen "next" button, the acceleromaters make things more complicated and cause more problems than they solve.
Re:optical mice (Score:2)
Re:optical mice (Score:2)
OT:
I wish a cell phone had an accelerometer and could judge it's situation to provide the correct ring. This would also include a sample from it's microphone (which would be easy to do with existing hardware) and select the correct thing:
- use the vibrator only when it's likely in contact with a perso
Re:optical mice (Score:2)
Re:I'm sceptical about... (Score:2, Funny)
Just shake it to erase.
/.ed (Score:4, Informative)
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simputer.com site is now working again (Score:1)
For those of us who don't know what a simputer is (Score:4, Informative)
From the Google cache: [216.239.57.104]
What is a Simputer?
Bridging the Great Digital Divide
The Simputer is a low cost portable alternative to PCs, by which the benefits of IT can reach the common man.
It has a special role in the third world because it ensures that illiteracy is no longer a barrier to handling a computer.
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 audio.
The Simputer meets these demands through a browser for the Information Markup Language (IML). IML has been created to provide a uniform experience to users and to allow rapid development of solutions on any platform.
Re:For those of us who don't know what a simputer (Score:1)
Re:For those of us who don't know what a simputer (Score:1)
Shoot! I was hoping that this was finally going to fill all my "The Sims" playing needs!
PDA accelerometers for scrolling patented (Score:4, Informative)
Patent number 6,466,198:
"View navigation and magnification of a hand-held device with a display" [uspto.gov]
The patent holder is called Innoventions [rotoview.com]
The patent is not worth the paper (Score:2)
Re:The patent is not worth the paper (Score:2)
My understanding is that if Patent Application B makes even fairly minor changes to Awarded Patent A, B is valid. It still has to pass the "novel" and "not obvious" tests. But it's possible that the Prior Art was narrow enough that the new patent is different enough to be valid.
Re:The patent is not worth the paper (Score:2)
Consider that the itsy comes from about 1995. It was written up a bit, but nothing major. In fact, it was mostly known in the OSS world. So the likelyhood of somebody outside knowing about it is slim. Now the folks doing patents are not all idiots, but if they are working on patents they no longer have time to work in the field.
Personally, I think th
Re:The patent is not worth the paper (Score:2)
Re:PDA accelerometers for scrolling patented (Score:3, Informative)
Re:PDA accelerometers for scrolling patented (Score:3, Informative)
1. If the patent holder applied for international patents then he might have recourse through WIPO (World Intellectual Property Org) and other agreements. India is a member of WIPO, and given that software development and other IP is seen as important to India's economic development, I don't think the Indian govt would permit wholesale flouting of international patents.
2. If the patent holder only has patents in the US, then anyone using the sa
Hot Chick (Score:2, Funny)
i need the hot chicks. Come on, this is slashdot, you were thinking it too.
Re:Hot Chick (Score:4, Funny)
http://www.amidasimputer.com/tour/stop4.php
"Along with a chikki, you can play hours and hours of CD-quality music "
So, Im not sure I read the advert correctly, but it sounds like you DO actually get a Chikki with each simputer.
Either that, or they are available for purchase direct from the site. (Chikki may be available for purchase online, pursuant to the governing laws of your State)
Re:Hot Chick (Score:3, Interesting)
Well sir, I am understanding why they would not be wanting their daughter to marry an uninformed Anglo-Desi like you (the emphasizing is being my own):
Some Linux PDAs never hit the market (Score:3, Informative)
Behold the power of the Simputer (Score:1, Redundant)
Re:Behold the power of the Simputer (Score:1)
This accelerometer thing... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:This accelerometer thing... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:This accelerometer thing... (Score:2, Interesting)
On a small display like a PDA or mobile phone, it makes viewing and reading pretty much "normal sized" web pages possible - while it's basically impossible to put up with reading a 100 page pdf when you have to use a stylus to mo
Seems like a dead end to me (Score:5, Interesting)
I don't get it (Score:3, Interesting)
Shouldn't the overriding factor for underdeveloped countries be the cost? Not portability and gee-whiz features like zooming by acceleratometers?
Re:I don't get it (Score:5, Informative)
Try guessing a little less, and obtaining a little more information next time.
Re:I don't get it (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:I don't get it (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:I don't get it (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:I don't get it (Score:2)
So instead I get to buy a vastly watered down machine (at $240 I get a greyscale display, no audio, no accelerometer - which is the only feature that makes the Amida interesting to begin with -, no smartcard reader, 16/32MB of memory and limited software features) but I get to avoid the MS tax?
Guess the tax got usurped by the cost of the Linux Hype feature.
Re:I don't get it (Score:2, Interesting)
The model that is expected to cost $200 dollars has a faster - more battery hungry - processor than my old Palm III, but not much more in terms of capability.
Re:I don't get it (Score:1, Informative)
Re:I don't get it (Score:1)
Re:I don't get it (Score:3, Insightful)
The group of scientists "Bangalore Seven" developed the Simputer with the average user in mind. The average user lives in a indian village and is much different from the western users. So the design is also different to fit the specific needs of it's customers:
# Power supply in rural India is pretty bad, with frequent "load-shedding" blackouts. Without an UPS you can't run a desktop. The simputer runs on three AAA batteries.
# Your average user may has never used a computer before. So you'll have to k
Re:I don't get it (Score:2, Insightful)
Something one can carry around or pass around is very important: People tend to have a very significant communal tendency in India, and sharing/passing around a computer to look up crop prices or weather or stock prices is important. So, small size is definitely a plus there: one simputer can
Re:I don't get it (Score:2, Insightful)
I think you'll find that mains power is rare in the market it is intended for - Rural or marginal India. Batteries rule while power surges are frequent.
Desktops need a lot of maintenance and upgrading to keep them sustainable/viable for more than three or four years. Just one person can carry a dozen of these on a bus to the city for flash upgrades.
In a place where families can share a single room the standard amount of space required is not the same as Padsville, USA. Finding a se
death by snusnu (Score:2, Funny)
This does not simpute. Simputer will return after deciding your punishment.
mitch
Re:death by snusnu (Score:2)
Gee, it sounds a lot like Landru [incompetech.com].
Re:death by snusnu (Score:2)
Re:death by snusnu (Score:1)
Re:death by snusnu (Score:2)
I would not consider Futurama geek canon. Though it is climbing towards that status.
Re:death by snusnu (Score:2)
When can we get an official unit measurement? (Score:1, Funny)
example:
"Man, that was only like 10 comments before my AMD Palomino core with no heatsink melted the motherboard."
connectivity (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:connectivity (Score:2)
Good for research in India (Score:2, Informative)
Some notable features (Score:5, Informative)
1. Runs Linux
2. Can connect to Internet though a regular phone line or CDMA cellphone
3. Has 2 USB ports built in
4. Has a inbuilt voice recorder
5. Aslo works as a MP3 and movie player(combine with the USB storage and
6. Has lots of inbuilt apps including internet browser, email, accounting and a panchanga ( Indian calender system used to figure out auspicious inauspicious days) etc.
7. Can wrie in multiple languages using a "bhasha" notebook software inbuilt and a special keyboard.
8. Gesture input using a inbuilt accelerometer
Other benefits
http://amidasimputer.com/benefits/
And you can buy it from here:
http://www.amidasimputer.com/buy
Re:Some notable features (Score:4, Informative)
* it has 2 USB adapters
* the USB code is based on a freely available kernel
There are some devices that have USB, but most of them only act as a USB _peripheral_. This can be a USB _host_. While it might seem more useful to use CF or SD for storage needs, the use of USB opens up the possibility of using lots of peripheral devices not usually open to PDAs, especially since designing drivers for Linux is generally understood.
The simputer wasn't designed for the First world (Score:2)
India has widespread CDMA coverage (and also GSM coverage).
Bluetooth and infrared are nice if your PDA needs to talk to other computers/other electric gadgets. The target audience (villagers in rural India) are not likely to have any electronic goods other than maybe a TV or radio.
Wifi is neat if you're a few hundred feet (at most) from a wireless access point,and
slashdotters are very stereotypical.. (Score:3, Insightful)
No I am not from India. I live in North America and I am a starving coder also. I just have respect for development of technology no matter where it is made.
Re:slashdotters are very stereotypical.. (Score:2)
In fact, when it was first mentioned on Slashdot the Simputer got VERY favorable response. But that was a long time ago, and the product has changed quite a bit from what was envisioned.
It was originally seen as a VERY CHEAP but general purpose computer specifically to allow people in developing countries to catch up with countries like the US where PCs are common. The emphasis w
How about this Simpleputer? (Score:3, Informative)
When the Simputer was first announced it was a great idea, cheap portable computing. Now I can get alomst the same thing as a toy.
MySQL strikes again. (Score:1, Troll)
Re:MySQL strikes again. (Score:2)
Re:MySQL strikes again. (Score:2)
Because everyone knows them: PostgreSQL and Interbase and SAPdb AKA MaxDB... or if one doesn't care for freedom, IBM DB2 or Sybase SQL Server.
Re:MySQL strikes again. (Score:2)
A filesystem ain't ACID, nor is MysQL without some magickal incantations...
Sex-Toy Mods (Score:2)
Great for sex-toy mods!
from the FAQ's (Score:3, Funny)
A: If all goes well, by March 2002 you should be able to buy one of them.
I guess all didn't go, "well."
You knew it was coming (Score:3, Funny)
One-handed photo enlargement, huh? one-handed next-pic viewing? very nice...
Oh wait, did I say pic? I meant page. ya, page.
Might be a "jerky" experience though...
Can you imagine (Score:2, Insightful)
10 Simputer Innovations (Score:4, Informative)
Why Amida? - Innovations
Power and Simplicity Built-in
The Amida Simputer was built on the premise that a computer is more useful when if it is easy-to-use. To achieve that simplicity however, our engineers have toiled hard. And, introduced a number of innovations, so that you (the user) can have the most versatile, most mobile personal computer in the world. Here are the top ten innovations:
Doodle n' Mail: Amida allows you to scribble on any screen using a stylus, and email it. is the world's first instance of any computer (handheld or otherwise) permitting annotation on every screen
Flip Flip Motion Sensor: Amida is the world's first and only computer that responds to your gestures - eg. you can turn the pages of an e-book with a flick of your wrist
Indian Languages: The Amida Simputer allows you to work and play in the language of your choice
Amida Chikki: Easy way to carry programs, music, movies, pictures...
Connectivity: Amida is the world's first handheld computer to have two USB slots (master and slave. Helps it work well with a range of other devices - Reliance CDMA phones (for Internet connectivity), PCs, digital cameras etc.
Pocket Hercules: The Amida Simputer combines portability and power in a manner that no other handheld in the world does. Check out the specs
Simplicity: The Amida Simputer includes a number of innovations that makes computing simple and enjoyable. If you want to work (and play) with consummate ease, then the world's easiest-to-use computer is for you!
Auto Updates: If you need to update your Amida Software, all you have to do is, open an application called Package Manager, connect to the Internet and tap "Update" - no "Install Managers", no visits to showrooms!
SmartCard Reader / Writer: The Simputer is the world's first computer to have an integrated SmartCard readr / writer. Use it for identification, sharing and security
Personalize: Amida lets you transform its appearance to suit your unique tastes and needs
Amida as coffee-maker: No, Amida does not do this. Not yet, anyway!
Okay so what hapeens if I... (Score:2)
Re:Not quite... (Score:1)
Did you read the article? (Score:4, Informative)
Try the buy link [amidasimputer.com]. Or just compare models [amidasimputer.com].
And next time, make sure you read the article and not just the Google Cache when somebody says a website was updated.
Re:Not quite... (Score:1)
Re:Not quite... (Score:2)
fwiw, quit using the google cache (Score:2)
Re:Zoom function (Score:4, Funny)
you can rotate the display by holding the simputer and twisting your wrist
if you toss the simputer directly above you its homing technology will cause it to fall back down towards you
and it will automatically shut itself down once the battery is dead
Zoom-Zoom (Score:4, Interesting)
The feature may have some interesting effects, with the optical zoom interacting with the on-screen zoom.
But as someone mentioned, a jolt on a bus could appear to jiggle the view window over an unmoving "document" -- the same could be done with the Z-axis, so a jolt toward you could reduce the image so as to keep the apparent size the same. (not that the screen has enough resolution to make the reduction optically perfect)
However, motion sickness is caused when the visual movement does not match that of the inner ear. I wonder how an unmoving object would be interpreted; maybe those with head-worn displays have some experience. (The reaction apparently is because many poisons cause visual distortions, so the resulting nausea is intended to trigger vomiting and remove any poisonous material which is still in the stomach.)
Re:does it run linux?? (Score:2, Informative)
Actually, they want to release the hardware specs under a GLP type license.
And apparently, as you are a
Re:does it run linux?? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:site (OT) (Score:1)
Re:site (OT) (Score:1)
Re:site (OT) (Score:2)
For the record, this is not unlike AI: they consistently refuse to see war as a violation of human rights.
If you can't even sway a person like me who is reasonnably well informed and open minded, what the heck do you hope to accomplish with your sig? If you assume people on