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WAN: India style

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  • 16-10-2001 10:57am
    #1
    Registered Users Posts: 759 ✭✭✭


    http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/sci/tech/newsid_1593000/1593890.stm

    By Frederick Noronha in Madras

    For the millions of Indian living in villages, making a phone call, let alone connecting to the internet, is a distant dream.

    But a new cheap and robust wireless technology could bring the information revolution to rural areas.

    Researchers at the Indian Institute of Technology in Madras have developed internet kiosks using a wireless local loop technology called corDECT.

    The system is cheap, as it replaces expensive cabling with wireless base stations.

    A kiosk costs around 40,000 rupees (US$830), compared to 30,000 rupees for installing a single telephone line.

    "Existing operators are really not focused on rural areas. They believe rural areas can't generate money and see rural areas as a burden," said Professor Ashok Jhunjhunwala at the Indian Institute of Technology.

    Together with some of his former students, Professor Jhunjhunwala has set up a company called n-Logue aimed at providing internet and telephone services in villages and small towns.

    Using wireless-in-loop technology to provide low cost telecommunications, the company offers the rural entrepreneur wireless equipment with antennas, cables and mast, the telephone set and a meter for subscriber calls.

    To access the internet, n-Logue offers a multimedia Pentium computer with a battery backup of four hours.

    It comes with Indian-language software to make the computer accessible to all.

    The plan is to tie up with local service providers (LSP). These small rural businessmen will be 50% partners of the kiosks and would use their local contacts to generate awareness and revenue.

    "We can create an army of rural entrepreneurs. They could take small loans to set up their own rural phone and internet centres," said Professor Jhunjhunwala.

    Within a 25km radius, the promoters expect to find buyers for 500-700 connections. These could be individuals, government offices or schools.

    "We could have a million subscribers in three to four years," said Professor Jhunjhunwala.

    Work to set up internet kiosks is taking place in Tamil Nadu and in Madhya Pradesh. Kiosks are also springing up in Rajasthan and in Punjab.

    Young entrepreneurs are catching on. One team has worked on a Tamil-Hindi-English spreadsheet for the Windows operating System and they are developing a version for Linux.

    Also on offer is word-processing, a e-mail program in Tamil and voicemail in the local language.

    All this, Professor Jhunjhunwala believes, will change the life of the ordinary villager.

    "We're adopting two key elements. Affordability, since everything is very low cost; and involving a local person in providing the solutions."

    "The first level feedback has been extremely encouraging. We have kiosks running in the middle of Madhya Pradesh where the average revenue a kiosk-man makes 4,500 rupees a month," said n-Logue Chief Executive Officer P G Ponnapa.

    "After expenses, he makes 3,000 rupees per month, which makes him a rich man in that village. And this guy is typically someone 21 to 25 years old."


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