14.2.10

Here comes Adam....




India is, of course, regarded as a software superpower, but it hasn’t really made waves in IT hardware so far. That could soon change, thanks to the Adam tablet PC of Hyderabad-based Notion Ink. Adam has generated enormous buzz on tech websites and gadget blogs ever since an early prototype was first demonstrated at the CES (Consumer Electronics Show), the world’s largest consumer tech trade show, in January this year. On Sunday, the final product minus the custom userinterface will be showcased at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, where the finest minds of geekdom will be congregating to check it out. But first, we persuaded the company to show it to us at the BVRIT Innovation Centre in Hyderabad, where they are based. Never heard of Notion Ink? Its founders are six IITians and an MBA grad. With an average age of 24, they believe India has what it takes to compete with the most innovative tech companies in the world. “We knew that Indian engineers and designers were doing most of the innovative work at Microsoft, Intel and Apple. We just needed to take the first step,’’ says cofounder Rohan Shravan. “Current PC technology is like a Hummer on a city road,’’ quips Rohit Rathi, the youngest of the group at 23, and, along with Shravan, one of four co-founders from IIT-Kharagpur. Two are from IIT-Delhi while Sachin Ralhan, the eldest at 25, is a childhood friend of Shravan and Rathi and an MBA from IIPM. Apart from Ralhan and Rathi, the other five are all aged 24. Three years in the making, the Adam tablet is the first device in the world to integrate two breakthrough power saving components—nVidias Tegra 2 chip and a PixelQi screen. Together, they help it achieve twice the battery life and performance of the iPad. The chip provides an edge over the iPad with its ability to play full high definition videos and Flash on the web browser. “It can offer the performance of a computer with the power consumption of a cellphone,’’ explains Rohan Shravan. Adam’s 10-inch screen integrates many innovations first used in the $100 OLPC (one laptop per child) project. Unlike traditional screens, PixelQI screen has a dual mode and can be read in bright sunlight like an e-reader. With the backlight off, the firm claims it can increase battery life between charges by a factor of five. The company has not yet taken a decision on pricing, but is clear that Adam will definitely be competitive vis-a-vis Apple’s iPad. It expects to start retail sales, first in the US, from July onwards. Notion Ink worked with the National Institute of Design’s R&D campus in Bangalore to build a unique touch interface that runs on Google’s Android mobile operating system. As a startup, it faced many obstacles in filing patents and finding the right engineering talent. “India doesn’t have people working on Android. And the firms that have charge Rs 1 lakh per resource per month,’’ says Rohan. “So we came up with a social solution—we opted to train engineers ourselves.’’ The company trained and then recruited over 50 engineers at BVRIT in Bachupally, Hyderabad. “We got the infrastructure at their Innovation Centre, and the students as well. We knew the technology in and out and started training them. Within two months, it started paying off, and we started developing the professional applications for the product we wanted to design,’’ he added. “The company is working on an application store platform of its own, where users can find a wide variety of content. It will offer everything from apps, books, video and audio to magazines, newspapers and comics,’’ says co-founder Rajat Sahni. “We see more users reading newspapers on e-readers and tablets in near future and have designed a lightweight product that adapts well to this purpose. They showed us a version of how a digital magazine would look on the Adam. We’ve taken design inspiration from a 400-year tradition—the user interface of magazines!’’ chuckles Shravan.

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