Delicious/allardstrijker

Delicious/allardstrijker


The world’s cheapest tablet is about to become the world’s cheapest phablet – Quartz

Posted: 29 May 2013 11:33 AM PDT

DataWind, the company behind the $40 tablet, this week finished shipping 100,000 devices to the Indian Institute of Technology. It's been quite a journey. But DataWind's founders are already working on the next iteration, called Aakash 3, and it has one significant upgrade: a place to stick a SIM card, so it can connect to cellular networks. DataWind's pitch for the new Aakash 3 goes like this: "An internal cellular modem at no additional cost, which allows the device to be used both as a mobile smart phone and also for ubiquitous internet connectivity with a basic SIM, will help herald India's internet revolution.""

How a $20 tablet from India could blindside PC makers, educate billions and transform computing as we know it – Quartz

Posted: 29 May 2013 11:32 AM PDT

Suneet Tuli, the 44-year-old CEO of UK/Canadian/Indian startup Datawind, is having a taxing day. "I'm underwater," he says as he struggles to find a cell signal outside a restaurant in Mumbai. Two days from then, on Sunday Nov. 11, the president of India, Pranab Mukherjee, will have unveiled the seven-inch Aakash 2 tablet computer Tuli's company is selling to the government for distribution to 100,000 university students and professors. (If things go well, the government plans to order as many as 5.86 million.) In the meantime, Tuli is deluged with calls from reporters, and every day his company receives thousands of new orders for the commercial version of the Aakash 2. Already, he's facing a backlog of four million unfulfilled pre-orders.