NEW DELHI (Reuters) - India launched what it dubbed the world's cheapest
tablet computer Wednesday, to be sold to students at the subsidized price of
$35 and later in shops for about $60.

Most of India's 1.2 billion people are poor and products such as Apple Inc's
iPad are beyond the reach even of many in the fast-growing middle class.

"The rich have access to the digital world, the poor and ordinary have been
excluded. Aakash will end that digital divide," Telecoms and Education
Minister Kapil Sibal said.

The government is buying the first units of the lightweight touch-screen
device, called Aakash, or "sky" in Hindi, for $50 each from a British
company which is assembling the web-enabled devices in India.

A pilot run of 100,000 units will be given to students for free, with the
first 500 handed out at the launch to a mixed response. It supports video
conferencing, has two USB ports and a three-hour battery life but some users
said it was slow.

India has a reputation for creating affordable products that are easy to use
and sturdy enough to handle its rugged environment -- from Tata Motors'
$2,000 Nano car to generic versions of pharmaceuticals.

Two years in development, the paperback book-sized Aakash may help the
government's goal of incorporating information technology in education,
although critics were doubtful of its mass appeal.

Despite being a leader in software and IT services, India trails fellow BRIC
nations Brazil, Russia and China in the drive to get the masses connected to
the Internet and mobile phones, a report by risk analysis firm Maplecroft
said this year.

The number of Internet users grew 15-fold between 2000 and 2010 in India,
according to another recent report. Still, just 8 percent of Indians have
access. That compares with nearly 40 percent in China.

The Aakash is aimed at university students for digital learning via a
government platform that distributes electronic books and courses.

Testing included running video for two hours in temperatures of 48 degrees
Celsius (118 degrees Fahrenheit) to mimic a northern Indian summer, said
DataWind, the small London-based company that developed the tablet with the
Indian Institute of Technology.

Rajat Agrawal, executive editor of gadget reviewers BGR India, said the 660
mhz processor from U.S. company Conexant Systems was "decent" for the price,
but warned the machine seemed slow and the touch screen not very agile.

"Because of the price there is a lot of excitement," he said. "People might
use it initially but if it is not user friendly they will give up within a
week."

After first giving them out for free, the government aims to sell them to
students for $35 next year. A retail version will be sold in Indian shops
for about $60.

The device uses resistive LCD displays rather than a full touch screen and
connects via wireless broadband. DataWind CEO Suneet Singh said future
versions would include a mobile phone connection, making it more useful in
rural areas.

The launch last week of Amazon's Kindle Fire shook up the global tablet
market, with its $199 price tag and slick browser a serious threat to
Apple's iPad.

Like the Kindle Fire, the Aakash uses the Google Android operating system.


For more information:

http://news.yahoo.com/india-launch-worlds-cheapest-tablet-computer-35-065413827.html

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