India unveils world’s cheapest tablet PC
India yesterday launched its long-awaited “computer for the masses”, unveiling a $46 tablet device designed to bring the information technology revolution to tens of millions of students.
DataWind, the Canada-based manufacturer, said the government was buying 100,000 of the tablets at Rs2,276 ($46) each to be given away for free to university and college students.
The price of what has been dubbed “the world’s cheapest computer” should fall to $35 and could even be hammered down as low as $10, DataWind said at the launch in New Delhi.
The computer has a 18cm touchscreen, Wi-Fi Internet function, a multimedia player and 180 minutes of battery power.
Called the “Aakash” (“Sky”), the stylish, locally-made device uses an Android 2.2 operating system and has an external 2GB storage card and two USB ports.
“Our goal was to break the price barrier for computing and Internet access,” DataWind CEO Suneet Singh Tuli said. “We’ve created a product that will finally bring affordable computing and Internet access to the masses.”
“It ($35) is a viable number, on our way to $10 also. Maybe not today but in time. That’s the goal,” he added.
The release of the Aakash has been hailed a major success for India, which is also famous for the Tata Nano - the world’s cheapest car, priced at about $2,500.
But experts warned the tablet device might struggle to live up to expectations with its limited 256-megabyte random access memory (RAM).
The computers will at first be distributed through universities and colleges rather than sold at shops, and the long-term marketing strategy remains unclear.
Commercial manufacturers are hoping Indian customers will leapfrog personal computers to buy tablets, as millions did by buying mobile telephones instead of waiting for a landline.
Apple’s internationally-popular iPad computers cost a minimum of $600 in India, with competitor Reliance Communications selling a rival tablet device at about $290.
The Aakash is part of a push to increase the number of students in higher education and to give them the technological skills needed to further boost the country’s recent rapid economic growth.
India, where the 61% literacy rate lags far behind many other developing nations such as China with 92%, is making major efforts to improve its education system.
“When these devices are actually used by students across India we will then get valuable feedback,” said Human Resource Development Minister Kapil Sibal at the launch event, where 500 students received the first models.
“This is the beginning of a journey,” he said, adding that 700 Aakashs are made daily and production would have to be increased rapidly.
“The rich have access to the digital world, the poor and ordinary have been excluded. Aakash will end that digital divide,” Sibal said.
Initial reactions to the Aakash were mixed, with the mainly middle-class technology department students at the event saying it needed refinement but was a good option for the poor.
“It could be better,” said Nikant Vohra, an electrical engineering student. “If you see it from the price only, it’s okay, but we have laptops and have used iPads, so we know the difference.”
Some 19mn people subscribe to mobile phones every month, making India the world’s fastest growing market, but most are from the wealthier segment of the population in towns.
Bharat Mehra, an expert on the use of communications technology for development, said the budget tablet could be used to deliver distance learning in rural areas and among students.
“If they are able to deliver what they promised it will make a huge difference,” said Mehra, who teaches at the University of Tennessee.
Source
http://www.gulf-times.com/site/topics/article.asp?cu_no=2&item_no=462172...
I like the sound of Tata-Tablet! Very... 'original' ;-P
Being Human - - you mean the guy died of shock on realizing that his market and share value was going to go down once this new product hit the stands in the US of A
lmao being human.... lol... that was a really good one... lol....hahahaha......
May be Steve died hearing about this news :(
May be Steve died hearing about this news :(