An assembly plant located at the Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Technology has rolled out the first batch of 2,000 tablets for school children.The assembly plant, a joint venture between JKUAT and Latin American firm Positivo BGH, has a capacity to churn out 600 tablets per day.
ICT and Innovation principal secretary Victor Kyalo on Tuesday said the government plans to have about 100,000 homegrown mobile computers out of the total 1.2 million devices to be rolled out in the first phase of the project.
“Now that we have perfected the art, we can do bigger batches. You should produce 10,000 tablets in the next batch,” Mr Kyalo said while visiting the Juja-based university on Tuesday.
Mr Kyalo was speaking when he led Nigeria’s communications minister Adebayo Shittu to tour the facility, which employs about 20 techies.
Mr Shittu said he was impressed with the project and mulled purchasing units from the Kenyan facility to pilot a digital learning programme in Nigeria.
JKUAT made news in June 2015 made news when it unveiled locally assembled laptops trading under the brand name ‘Taifa’ and retailing at about Sh41,500 Devices from the JKUAT- Positivo BGH project will be distributed to public schools in 21 counties, officials said.
Another consortium made up of Moi University and Portuguese tech firm JP SA Couto was the other winner to locally assemble tablets.