Summary A lot of time and energy is evidently being spent on developing low cost tablets and computers for the underprivileged masses, with several notable examples developed indigenously by Indians (such as the $35 Sakshat and the $50 Allgo tablets), as well as various attempts good-looking but not so inexpensive devices by the One Laptop Per Child Foundation (OLPC). Now, a broad-spanning collaborative effort by Singapore’s Nanyang Technological University (NTU), Houston’s Rice University, Switzerland's Centre for Electronics and Microtechnology, and an Indian NGO – Villages for Development and Learning Foundation (ViDAL) – has apparently born fruit, in the form of the solar-powered iSlate, which is officially called an electronic notepad rather than a tablet. Tthe iSlate stands apart from other inexpensive laptop/tablet devices by being completely solar-powered, which is an extremely useful feature in regions where electricity is a rare commodity, if available at all (that unfortunately happens to describe be a large portion of India’s rural areas). The iSlate’s processors are energy-efficient microchips that have been designed by NTU’s Institute of Sustainable and Applied Infodynamics and the Centre for Electronics and Microtechnology. They utilize only a fraction of the power used by most modern chips, and make for a long battery life that is easily replenished under sunlight.