HP Labs India
Hewlett-Packard shows off research aimed at boosting India sales |
Associated Press
April 06, 2006
PALO ALTO, Calif. (AP) - Hewlett-Packard Co. on Thursday showed off new products and research tailored to India, including a writing tablet that makes it easier to enter native Indian characters into a computer.
HP is also aiming the technologies at China and Russia in an attempt to adapt its products to countries with languages, economies and cultures that differ from HP's strongholds in the United States and Western Europe.
"If you're in the high technology business, you need to look ahead. The ball keeps moving," Dick Lampman, HP's senior vice president of research, told reporters.
He spoke at a demonstration at HP headquarters that featured technologies designed at HP Labs India, which was established in 2002.
The square tablet, which HP dubbed the Gesture Keyboard, allows a computer user to use a penlike stylus to enter characters in Indic and Kannada -- two of India's 14 national languages. The 6-inch-by-6-inch device was introduced in India two weeks ago and costs about $50. HP plans to offer updates so it will eventually serve speakers of additional languages.
"This is the way we learn to write as children," said Ajay Gupta, the director of HP Labs India. "There's absolutely no new learning required."
Among the other research the company demonstrated:
Software that prints out charts, graphics
and literature that accompanies television broadcasts. The
product, which is still being tested, is aimed at serving
schools and community centers in countries where Internet
access still lags far behind the availability of TV broadcasts.
A system that uses a barcode to electronically confirm the
authenticity of printed documents. HP hopes government agencies
will use it to deliver land records and other official documents
to cyber cafes in remote areas so farmers don't have to
travel to a central office.
An electronic tablet that electronically stores information
entered into forms. It would allow census takers and people
doing market surveys to fill out forms with pen and paper
and then digitally transmit the contents to a computer.
HP is hoping the products will help it increase revenue
by expanding into new markets. The Palo Alto-based company
got about 35 percent of its 2005 revenue from the United
States, and less than 10 percent of its sales from India.
U.S. revenue grew less than 5 percent between 2003 and 2005. It grew by more than 28 percent in non-U.S. countries
By Dan Goodin
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