BANGALORE, INDIA - Thin client computing vendor Wyse Technology has identified applications for bridging the digital divide as a new key market opportunity, according to an executive of the San Jose, California, company.
The company announced Thursday that it is part of a consortium that is piloting in India a platform for the delivery of services to rural areas around its thin client technology.
"It is a significant market opportunity for us, but it is too early however to say what percentage of our revenues will come from digital divide projects," Tarkan Maner, chief marketing officer of Wyse told reporters Thursday in Bangalore, India.
The pilot project, which started in Anekal, a village in the Karnataka state of the country, is one of several similar initiatives planned by Wyse in the Middle East, Latin America, and some countries in Europe, Maner said.
Wyse plans to unveil its strategy for the digital divide market worldwide at a company conference in New York in November. "We will be announcing the names of services providers, infrastructure providers, IT providers, and finance providers who are partnering with us on these initiatives," Maner said. Besides global companies and organizations, local content and service providers in each of the markets will be part of the consortium, Maner added.
Wyse's thin client technology is ideal for the hostile rural environments in which these devices will be deployed, said John Kish, president and chief executive officer of Wyse. "Our devices are solid state with no moving parts, and they are best suited to deployment in large numbers and over large geographical areas," he added.
For the pilot at Anekal, Wyse has teamed up with Comat Technologies, a Bangalore-based provider of technology and services for electronic governance projects, and ICICI Bank, a large private bank in Mumbai, which already offers micro credit and other financial services in India's rural markets. The consortium has the backing of the International Finance Corp (IFC) in Washington, D.C., and the Poverty Action Lab of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
The plan of the consortium is to set up about 5,000 rural business centers (RBCs) in the rest of Karnataka, and thereafter about 30,000 to 50,000 such RBCs in other states in the country, said Ashim Roy, Comat's business head for North America.
Although Wyse, Comat, and ICICI Bank have invested in the pilot, the aim of the project is to have self-sustaining RBCs, said Ravi Rangan, chief executive officer of Comat.
"We think we can make money by putting together revenue sharing agreements with the services providers like financial services providers and the government," Rangan said. However until the revenues start kicking in, the consortium expects organizations such as the IFC to help fund the initial investments required to scale up the project, he added.
The objective of the consortium is to have one RBC for every 10 to 15 villages and offer a mix of educational, financial, healthcare, and e-governance services, Rangan said.

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