Montreal-based developer Datawind is selling the tablets to the government for about $47 each, and subsidies will reduce that to $37 ($35 US) for students and teachers. In compari ...
Recently the company responsible for designing India’s $35 Aakash tablet announced plans to launch a second generation device. It will have a faster processor, and longer battery life, but it will ...
India’s highly touted $35 tablet, set to ship in two to three weeks, is getting a makeover with improved hardware and Google’s Android 4.0 OS, according to the company assembling the device for the ...
The Indian government and Canadian company DataWind are launching what might be the world’s cheapest tablet this week with the Aakash, a 7-inch Android tablet. While the device will not impress ...
I wore the world's first HDR10 smart glasses TCL's new E Ink tablet beats the Remarkable and Kindle Anker's new charger is one of the most unique I've ever seen Best laptop cooling pads Best flip ...
India's first low-cost tablet, the Aakash (aka UbiSlate 7), is receiving overwhelming attention and demand from both corporate and individual buyers, with more than a million units of the device ...
The Aakash tablet has already acquired the distinction of being one of the cheapest to own right now, though the device in all probability is going to take on a whole new form. No, we are not talking ...
The Indian government thinks the $35 Aakash Android tablet has the power to change the world. After testing one out, we’d tend to agree. An Aakash tablet was brought to the VentureBeat office on ...
The Indian government started something great with the original Aakash 2 tablet. It set out to revolutionize the Indian education, and to help hundreds of millions of its own people to get better ...
When it come to Android tablets, no one tablet is made equal and with tablets costing less and less these days it begs the question, “How cheap can they go?”. Well, if you happen to live in India they ...
Can you build a tablet for £30? The Aakash tablet transforming education in India says you can, and it's coming to Britain soon. Richard Trenholm Former Movie and TV Senior Editor Richard Trenholm was ...
We first saw India's cheap tablet last year, and now, a year later, the Aakash has started shipping to Indian students complete with the promised $35 price tag. The $35 price includes an Indian ...
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