Round-up of regional news

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INDIA
Cut-rate
In what seems to be a new trend in New Delhi, Kapil Sibal, the minister of human-resource development, recently launched a new budget-priced electronic gadget. The device, which comes with a pricetag of USD 35, appears to be an indigenous version of Apple's iPad – a tablet computer to help spread the digital revolution in India. Although the exact details about the device are yet to be announced, a lofty list of rumoured capabilities has been circulating, including a touch screen and wireless-Internet facilities. It is, however, questionable whether Sibal's gizmo will have the global appeal of its Apple forbear.

Project Sakshat ('Embodiment'), as it is known, is reported to be a 'personal dream' of Minister Sibal. One of the reasons the price of the device is so low is that it uses the free Linux operating system. But the minister wants to bring the cost of the device down to just USD 10 as he advances the government's agenda of 'inclusive education', which hopes to bridge the in-country digital divide while bolstering the national economy. Media reports claim that the first recipients of the Sakshat tablet will be schoolchildren.

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