Thursday, 26 April 2012

Datawind launches tablet PC at Rs 3,000


UK-based Datawind which had bagged a contract for supplying low-cost tablet 'Aakash' to the government, today launched two such computing devices in the price range of Rs 3,000-4,000, considered to be amongst the cheapest in the market.

Datawind, which had run into problems with the IIT Rajasthan and its sub-contractor Quad Electronics for the much-touted 'Aakash' claimed that it has already done 30 lakh bookings for the new tablets launched in the commercial market.

"We will first deliver pre-bookings, which are over 30 lakh ," Datawind CEO Suneet Singh Tuli  told reporters here.

He said both the models launched are embedded GPRS modems along with WiFi connectivity. The tablets have seven inch screens which support Android 2.3 operating system, a8-800 Mhz processor and 256 mb RAM.

Tuli did not agree with the perception that the tablet market in India was not growing.

"We are getting around 8,000 orders...". When asked whether all these bookings are genuine purchase orders, since no advance payment is required,he said "conversion (from pre-to-firm bookings) is 88 per cent".

Datawind had hit headlines in October last year when it unveiled 'Aakash', touted as the world's cheapest tablet to be supplied to the HRD Ministry at Rs 2276 a piece. 

The government, in turn, had to give about one lakh of these tablets to the students at subsidised price Rs 1100-1200 each.

However, the IIT-Rajasthan, the nodal agency for the 'Aakash' project, had rejected the tablet for not meeting performance criteria and the project had to be shifted to IIT Bombay.

"We will provide (upgraded) Aakash  to the government for approval and after getting it, we will then deliver the one lakh tablets," Tuli added.

Telecom Minister Kapil Sibal had recently said  that the upgraded version would be available in May.

For the tablets launched commercially today, Datawind has tied up with mobile service provider Aircel for voice and data services, which is offering Rs 100 unlimited plan for internet usage.

No comments:

Post a Comment