NComputing's success shows that perhaps the needs of a suburban school in Dallas are not that different than those of a Macedonian school district. Both customers were looking for a solution that could stretch their existing technology budgets to accommodate more students. Capitalizing on existing PCs in under-equipped computer labs, NComputing's technology turns one CPU into individual computer access for up to seven students. NComputing built upon existing technology and previously-tested solutions to address a fundamental need to increase one-to-one computer access in emerging economies. Like many emerging-market solutions, the beauty is in the simplicity. The education market agrees. In a recent roundtable discussion with Vital Wave Consulting, Dukker explained that NComputing's biggest limiting factor is not demand but rather a robust enough channel to distribute the technology.
Research by Vital Wave Consulting suggests that NComputing's approach of adapting current technology for emerging-market needs has merit. (Indeed, the company has had more success to date than other high-profile, low-cost PC initiatives.) Vital Wave Consulting favors this approach as one of the key strategies for success in emerging markets. With straightforward technology adaptations like NComputing's multi-user solution, corporations could penetrate developing-country markets without undue disruption to current industry and technology processes.
Also in the news:
- 3Com Goes After Cisco in Emerging Markets
- Cheap Laptops are Still Missing in Action
- Ericsson's Approach to Low-End Markets is More of Same
1 comment:
This comment pertains to the article "Africa says call me back".
This practice is also prevalent in India, and in fact is very useful to signal events - for eg. I'm now leaving the office, or, for a driver - bring the car to the porch, etc. IN such cases, no one (neither receiver nor caller) pays for the call, and the message gets transmitted. Not much operators can do - this aspect is the mobile serving a pager function.
Grin and bear it is the message for operators!
Samir Kumar
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