Third World Research, Development & Innovation 222
tovarish writes "It is nice to see that countries like India are trying to research communication techniques in backward and rural areas. While tech savvy people like us enjoy the latest gadgets it is quite a challenge to develop gadgets which actually help the poor and illiterate. While India's satellite launches and outsourcing news are already covered in slashdot umpteen times, sometimes her sensible achievements should be covered too."
Flame (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Flame (Score:5, Insightful)
Glasshouses and stones and all that ....
Re:Flame (Score:2)
Re:Flame (Score:3, Insightful)
12% of our population is below the poverty line, in India it is nearly twice that.
Plus, our definition of poverty is different from most countries. To give an example, my grandmother is below the poverty line. Her life consists of living in a reasonably nice house, balanced diet (even goes out to eat with my mother), shopping, watches tv and just generally takes it easy. Once a year she c
Why does India need hi-tech just to survive? (Score:2, Insightful)
1. GPS to coordinate the trains.
2. low-cost broadband into remote villages
In 1960, Japan was low-tech. It was just emerging out of a textile-based economy, yets its quality of life is much higher than the quality of life in India in 2004 (40 years later). Japan had no GPS to coordinate the trains, yet they were always (and still are) on time. Educational levels in Japan at that time were high. Kids in remote farming enclaves in Hokkaido
Re:Why does India need hi-tech just to survive? (Score:5, Informative)
Population: 1,065,070,607
Japan:
Population: 127,214,499
(from wikipedia).
Please keep these facts in mind before saying anything.
India faced three wars immediately after partition. Two with Pakistan and one with China. Japan didn't face any. Nuclear weapons were a necessity for India.
India has 21+ different official languages. Japan has one. The space program helped put educational and weather satellites in place. And India now sells satellite launches.
It's extremely convenient to compare India and Japan, but it's really a wrong comparison.
Re:Why does India need hi-tech just to survive? (Score:2)
Re:Why does India need hi-tech just to survive? (Score:2, Interesting)
In 48 years, the female life expectancy went up by ~26 years in India while in Japan it went up by 20 years and ~12 years in
Re:Why does India need hi-tech just to survive? (Score:2)
Re:Why does India need hi-tech just to survive? (Score:2)
As for the economic depression... it's never good when the people with the money escape to never come back. Independence has that, at the beginning at least.
Re:Why does India need hi-tech just to survive? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Flame (Score:2)
Query: (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Query: (Score:2, Funny)
Ground control staff have to wear groucho mark fake glasses and moustaches. It's the law.
Re:Query: (Score:5, Insightful)
Outsourcing too
Can you imagine a country refusing outsourcing? How stupid would *that* be?
"No thanks, we want our economy to be shit and our people to starve so we dont want money and jobs."
What would our own congress do?
Re:Query: (Score:2)
Keep in mind that these are not permanent jobs going to India and staying. Outsourcing/offshoring is a race for the bottom. As soon as a cheaper country presents itself, those jobs will be just as gone as they are in the US. Mexico learned this the hard way when manufacturing went there, then left for other countries, and eventually settled in China (for the moment) at US$0.16 an hour with no worker rights, time off, or perks.
Given that a country h
Newsflash!!! (Score:4, Informative)
The Sudan is 3rd world
Re:Newsflash!!! (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:Newsflash!!! (Score:3, Informative)
peace.
Holy Shit! (Score:2)
India is really big and has over a billion people! Some areas are advanced, but most are every bit a third world country.
Re:Newsflash!!! (Score:3, Informative)
D'oh! Perhaps you meant developing/under-developed/whatever?
Re:Newsflash!!! (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Newsflash!!! (Score:2)
Re:Newsflash!!! (Score:2, Insightful)
Maybe in infra structural terms (that too in certain parts). But attitude wise, I don't think so
Re:Newsflash!!! (Score:1)
Re:Newsflash!!! (Score:1)
I didn't come up with the term, I don't particularly like the term, but the criteria that were applied by those that originally coined the phrase still apply to India, and "attitude" wasn't one of them.
Worlds (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Worlds (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Worlds (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Worlds (Score:2)
Second-world was the Soviet-Union and soviet Eastern Europe... That is, any country where the populat
Re:Worlds (explained maybe) (Score:1)
Re:Newsflash!!! (Score:3, Informative)
Economic Uses (Score:5, Interesting)
Are we allowed to (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Are we allowed to (Score:5, Interesting)
Unless things have changed drastically in the past few years or so, while the attitude towards education may be great, their willingness to supply the funding behind that attitude is not.
In my opinion, technology does not, in and of itself, solve any problems. There must be attitudinal changes, particularly in the government. Closer to (my) home, this explains why, despite spending more and more each year on computers and other technologies, the US continues to lag behind other countries in education and in how much most current students know and how well they apply that knowledge. It's an attitudinal problem. We train our children to be too focused on education as a means towards a high-paying job, so they don't value knowledge unless they feel it directly translates into acquiring wealth. And that's the *successful* students. Many others, mostly raised in poor environments with limited educational resources and households were both parents *must* work in order to feed their children, have resigned themselves to working in the service industry for the rest of their lives and thus don't take any interest in education.
I'm not sure if these same psychological dynamics have started up in India yet.
Re:Are we allowed to (Score:2)
This does not surprise me.
However, I'd be interested in knowing how well they do in funding primary education, primarily in the poorer regions of India. Again, unless there have been massive changes recently, news stories I've read seem to indicate that many poorer areas do not have an acceptable place to teach, let alone the teachers to do so.
Re:Are we allowed to (Score:4, Insightful)
Who are we to call part of India "backward"?
We do this because a large part of India is still where the west was centuries ago. Shortage of clean water, primitive communication, small scale inefficient agriculture, etc.
The Indian people are making enormous progress in a comparable short ammount of time.
I agree, and I'm also very impressed with that. But the fact that they are working hard to get close to where we are now means they also identify their current situation as backwards in many ways.
In many ways the Indian attitude towards education is superior to our own.
Poor doesn't mean stupid. The richer the country, the more the people think they can afford to be stupid. That's one of the reasons that previously rich countries tend to lose their status.
Re:Are we allowed to (Score:1)
Re:Are we allowed to (Score:2)
Working, but not particularly hard. For one thing, I have time to read/write
In its centuries long existance, it must have reached its final goal (whatever it was) by now.
Not final, but preferable to what it was in the past.
The situation is still better than what was prevaliling in US after 50 years of independence - fighting for slaves.
I'm not arguing that point. When I say India is backwards, I compare it to the current US. I agree
Re:Are we allowed to (Score:2)
Get back to me when India is even attempting [ambedkar.org] to provide equal education to all its citizens (barring those who can afford private schooling of course, who won't be interested) and I'll agree with you.
Re:Why? (Score:2)
Must be hard... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Must be hard... (Score:1, Troll)
...and to still expect handouts from first world countries because they're so poor.
India has always struck me as a bizarre place: one of the poorest places in the world and yet they still feel they can afford to have nukes.
Re:Must be hard... (Score:5, Insightful)
I think a few well trained special ops teams could do the work of many of our over-powered weapons.
You know, or not.
Re:Must be hard... (Score:3, Interesting)
It sounds like a great analogy, but I think most studies have demonstrated that increased per pupil spending doesn't accomplish very much.
Besides, in the US at least, the increased spending generally goes for social welfare type programs (meals, social workers, kids dubiously labeled "learning disabled") within the schools instead of increasing the quality of education itself (better teaching, better teaching
Re:Must be hard... (Score:2)
India has always struck me as a bizarre place: one of the poorest places in the world and yet they still feel they can afford to have nukes.
Just like all those guys on welfare driving around in Escalades.
Re:Must be hard... (Score:1, Insightful)
India has always struck me as a bizarre place: one of the poorest places in the world and yet they still feel they can afford to have nukes.
It's not a question of affordability, but a necessity. At least if you want to prevent a "regime change" forced down your throat. I bet North Korea, for all it's fsck-ed up condition would not have that happen to them...
Re:Must be hard... (Score:5, Informative)
Rubbish. India has been self-sufficient in food since the early 1970s. Some aid for health, education and infrastructure does come in, but even that is mostly loans, not "handouts". American and Japanese aid comes with too many ridiculous strings attached, India learned long ago not to get too entrapped with it. As for the nukes: America was worried about war with a country on the other side of the world. India has gone to war with two countries on its borders, one of whom (China) is truly the 800lb gorilla of Asia with whom there continue to be unresolved border disputes, and is an acknowledged nuclear power. You saying India has less right than the USA to nukes? I don't like nukes either, but let's abolish them all, maybe step by step, rather than say the big five can keep what they have and make more while they're at it.
Re:Starving indian children (Score:2)
Read up on what "self-sufficient" means, and read up on some basic economics and history too, before calling people liars. There is food for all; what many don't have is purchasing power, and a good public distribution system doesn't exist (a bad one does exist, though). Nothing to do with foreign aid or lack of it.
Re:Must be hard... (Score:1, Troll)
Re:Must be hard... (Score:5, Informative)
We also cannot have an un-elected leader so our current PM has to win a seat in either our lower house (Lok Sabha) or the higher house (Rajya Sabha).
Please keep to the topic.
We are a democratic country. As for achievements is concerned, here is one - Electronic Voting Machines that was used for our last general elections without any trouble. While a developed democracy is a laughing stock of the world because of its 2000 presidential ballot problems in Florida.
Re:Must be hard... (Score:1)
Third World.. (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Third World.. (Score:1, Informative)
Re:Third World.. (Score:2)
Uhh... Japan? (Score:2)
The real reason for the correlation has nothing to do with racism and more to do with geography. The 3rd world nations are almost exclusively in the tropics where it's a bitch to live because of the lack of one thing... winter. A constant growing season means insects and disease are a constant threat that never has a chance to die off every year. People li
Re:Third World.. (Score:2)
Nowhere, anymore. Back in good ol' days Second World was used to describe The USSR and industrialized countries under the Soviet sphere of influence in Eastern Europe, Middle East and Asia. I guess nowadays many of these countries can be categorized as First World countries with no doubt (Poland, Czech, The Baltic States and other new EU member countries). And some of them have been "downgraded" to be a Third World country, Vietnam for instance. Now in which slot would Russia, A
waitaminute (Score:1, Redundant)
Re:waitaminute (Score:2, Informative)
refer specifically to itself. They INVENTED
the term.
US + NATO == first world
Russia + Warsaw pact == second wold
Non aligned == third world (including the swiss)
Priorities? (Score:2, Interesting)
At least do that before we can get them electronic gadgets like CD and MP3 players so they can transfer they money to the RIAA.
BC
Re:Priorities? (Score:1, Insightful)
RTFA. Ok I know this is slashdot and everything. But I am tired of yet another clueless american telling us about our priorities without knowing what is going on here. There are people without food granted. But these programs are trying to correct that. And these programs are not about supplying Mp3 players to people who cant read.
I dont know why the moment technology is mentioned, mp3 players are
Wrong Topic ??? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Wrong Topic ??? (Score:2, Informative)
Definition of "Third World" (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Definition of "Third World" (Score:2)
"Underdeveloped or developing countries, as in The conditions in our poorest rural areas resemble those in the third world. This expression originated in the mid-1900s, at first denoting those countries in Asia and Africa that were not aligned with either the Communist bloc nations or the non-Communist Western nations. Because they were for the most part poor and underdeveloped, the term was transferred to all countries w
Re:Definition of "Third World" (Score:2, Interesting)
It would have been coined by a french journalist who made a parallel between the poor countries of the World and the "Tiers-Etat" (Third state) which were the official representation of the french people before the revolution (the 1st state was nobility and the 2nd was the Church) it was under-represented (1/3 of the voices in debates but it represen
Re:Definition of "Third World" (Score:2, Funny)
1. number of nuclear weapons
2. kill count
3. military size
4. countries destroyed
5. number of broken treaties
6. skin lightness
7. number of deaths by pollution
8. number of McDonalds establishments
Add them up and if you score high enough, congrats! You're a first-world country. Let's go kill some Iraqis.
Re:Definition of "Third World" (Score:2)
I remember a story (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:I remember a story (Score:4, Insightful)
Microloans vs. Large-scale Investment (Score:1)
From a recent article in India newspaper... (Score:3, Funny)
What I saw... (Score:5, Interesting)
In the last ten years, the biggest changes in India are the spread of ATM's and mobile phones. When the state run BSNL started cellular services in 2002 in rural Indian towns, there were stampedes to get the application form.
What you dont find is decent broadband and good roads. Broadband may happen soon with Reliance Infotech putting fiber. But no chance of roads getting better.
And the country proves the trickle down theory favored by World Bank and IMF will not work. I am yet to see anything trickling down. And the country is liberalising for the last 10 years.
Does that mean liberalisation is bad?
No.
USA is a 3rd world country in science research (Score:5, Interesting)
Also, America is even behind 3rd world countries like India & China in terms of science research papers when looked at on a per-capita-wealth basis (numbers of papers per unit of wealth per country). Note on the graph how much to the right America is when compared to, say, India. India publishes more peer-reviewed science papers more capita wealth than does America.
THis is all based on the study entitled "Scientific Impact of Nations" by King for 2004. You can get a link to the pdf version of the paper and see a graph of science papers per per-capita-wealth here [gnxp.com].
Well, you learned something today, huh? Now go watch the debate Wednesday and listen to Bush and Kerry tell us about how America is the greatest nation on earth.....
Re:USA is a 3rd world country in science research (Score:2)
How come they consistently bag the science Nobels? (Score:2)
One thing could simply be university management. Here in Europe we're constantly complaining about the academic brain-drain to the US. One reason could be super-hierarchial university culture here. Basically, in the US you get your $XXX grant and you do whatever you wish with the money, whereas here in Europe you have to fight the bureocracy for 2 months to get a pencil sharpener. Which means that the best and br
Re:USA is a 3rd world country in science research (Score:2)
Until India is able to pave their roads to a reasonable extent AT LEAST consistent with the Roman Empire of approximately 2000 years ago,
Re:USA is a 3rd world country in science research (Score:2)
So what if India has more papers per unit of wealth (whatever that means), they dont even have enough wealth to pave their roads! This entire planet is rock. They can't find a million unemployed people and have them start digging?
I believe this is where you explain why paved roads are a prerequisite for researching and publishing papers. As much fun
Re:USA is a 3rd world country in science research (Score:2)
I think it is quite relevant, and I think you ad hominem attacks are rather uncalled for. What you are implying is that the US should be spending on research at least as much, on a per unit of wealth basis (still as of yet not defined to my satisfac
Re:USA is a 3rd world country in science research (Score:3, Insightful)
I await your pointing out where I said any such thing. I'm a patient man, but I suppose I'll be waiting for some time.
There are some highways, but it is not a comprehensive national system by any means. Highways in India are
Re:USA is a 3rd world country in science research (Score:2)
So your discussion about per unit of wealth research spending was relevant to this discussion in what way? You just decided to point out some facts?
Yeah, I'm going to call bullshit on this one. 500km out of 3.3 million kilometers of highways are more than two lanes? Puh-leeze. Give me more sources to back that up and I'll consider it accurate, but until then I'm gonna flatly reject this.
or buy an ipod (Score:4, Insightful)
Which is like saying I shouldn't buy an ipod while there are people starving anywhere. Or wait, I should't buy a cell phone. Or a CD. Or even another pair of shoes if my first pair has any wear left - as long as someone somewhere is hungry.
If one of the 100,000 was going to do research in USA or India, let them choose to do it in India. Don't make them be a primary school teacher, they make hate it and put people off learning altogether.
Its a tempatation when dealing with figures to step too far and make decisions regarding peoples lives and freedoms - remove an arm here, make someone work in a coal mine there - as if its OK because the over-all picture is neater.
I think the other guy had it right.
Sam
Re:or buy an ipod (Score:2)
No, its like saying the State shouldn't provide you with free college education when most roads in your country aren't paved! We are NOT talking about the freedom to perform research, ie to sit down and study whatever you want. We are talking about institutional resea
Re:or buy an ipod (Score:2)
What is your fixation with paved roads? (Don't answer that)
We are NOT talking about the freedom to perform research, ie to sit down and study whatever you want. We are talking about institutional research
Good, they might invent a cheaper way to pave roads since McAdam all those years ago in 18th Century Britain.
Keeping intellectuals in the country is GOOD. The more smart brain
Re:USA is a 3rd world country in science research (Score:2)
This is based on citations-per-capita. There is a big question whether citations-per-capita or articles-per-capita really translates to "science per capita".
The US has as many Ph.D.'s per 1,000 population as France, the UK, and even the EU in general. And the US has more full-time researchers per 1,000 population than any EU country or the EU as a whole.
Good lord not again ! (Score:3, Insightful)
"people like us" (Score:1, Offtopic)
A better article on India's innovations (Score:1)
India's space activities, a short summary (Score:4, Informative)
India also launches satellites meant for polar orbits (the IRS series, for instance) from her own soil, has been for some years now.
The latest news in India's space program is the launch of a geo-synchronous satellite (Edusat) that seems to have gotten attention at
But that's just the latest news; as I said, India's been in space for nearly 30 years now.
Why stale references to MLA? (Score:1)
Last year, MIT asked Indian Govt. to cough up US$ 5m for using the name "Media Lab" and Govt refused to oblige and deal was called off.
MIT-style research has failed in India.
Re:Why stale references to MLA? (Score:2, Informative)
Go ahead mod me down (ha ha) (Score:4, Funny)
LOL! They will stone you like in "The Lottery"! (Score:2)
Wizzy Digital Courier (Score:2)
What could YOU do to connect the world? (Score:2)
when you're in asia, you gotta innovate (Score:3, Insightful)
Just $3200 ?? !!! (Score:2, Informative)
$3200 is insanely high for any indian school to afford. this is probably more than the entire IT spending budget in an year for a small school. u can buy cheap computers in india for around 250$, but computers are still cheaper in USA for similar configuration.
The main problem with india is there is that most of the people in rural areas dont even know what
which third world? (Score:2)
Stories about India are flamebait (Score:3, Insightful)
Stories about China's achievements get applauded as "humankind's" achievements while the same about India are booed as someone trying to achieve high status. A projection's of the reader's thoughts is what it is.
You guys and girls don't even know the history of India and you don't know what a belief her people have in her "tryst with destiny" (Nehru's speech on midnight of India's independence). Why are these two things important? Because
(a) history teaches us something. For those whose concept of ancient-ness is 200 years, this concept would probbaly have no meaning. Consider this, for most of its history, India was a rich country which was a subject of invasions and immigrations. It was called a "bird of gold." But Indians became complacent and gave more attention to arts, poetry (and probably sex - an ancestor of mine wrote Kamasutra). It got invaded so much that it was under non-Indians' rule for 1000 years.
And now when we develop nuclear weapons to prevent repeat of history, you history-less people have the gall to tell us we are wrong!
(b) we achieved higher things before and by doing technological innovation we are only going back to the same level, we don't aspire for any high frikkin status. That will come with time and accomplishments.
Here is the bottomline, take it or take it.
We will continue to use technology.
We will continue to develop further technology.
We will continue to do whatever it takes us to protect the borders and peoples of India.
If you dislike it, close your eyes, stop reading about India, and keep licking China's a$$.
Re:Stories about India are flamebait (Score:3, Informative)
Indians have lived for over 1000 years under foreign rule and yet have managed to maintain their languages, religions, culture and lots more.
India always was a golden bird, to many people from the persians to the British.
Hence to label India poor is incorrect, especially since most of it wealth was literally stolen by the British during their 200 years r