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Thread: India's $20 Tablet--A Game Changer

  1. #1

    Default India's $20 Tablet--A Game Changer

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

    The Aakash 2 isn’t just the cheapest fully functional tablet PC on the planet because the Indian government has decided it should be—it’s the cheapest, period....the ultimate price university students will pay for [this] tablet, after half its cost has been subsidized by the Indian government, is $20.


    Ubislate - the commercial version of the Aakash 2 (Aakash means "blue sky")

    Disrupting the world’s largest tech companies

    “The revolution will come from the developing world to the US,” says Vivek Wadhwa, an entrepreneur and academic. “These tablets will kill the markets for high-end players—for Microsoft in particular.”

    Wadhwa knows Tuli and has become the Aakash 2′s champion stateside, writing about the device and getting it into the hands of executives. He believes that the $40 price of the tablet could drop to $25 within a year. “I showed a Google executive [this] tablet. He suddenly realized that his $99 tablet isn’t going to stand up to the $25 tablet from India.”

    Many in Silicon Valley are suddenly fixated on cheap tablets. “I see a lot of the PC makers and hardware companies here [in the US] are going to build a tablet strategy,” says Jay Goldberg, a financial analyst who was surprised to discover on his last trip to China just how cheap functional 7″ tablets have become. “But if there are already $45 tablets out there, even that second-tier strategy [of replacing lost PC sales with tablets] is going to fail.”

    Everyone I interviewed for this piece thought that Apple, as a company that differentiates itself by being a high-end brand, would survive the coming of cheap tablets. But Goldberg and Wadhwa agreed that other manufacturers of Android-based tablets, even Samsung, would have a hard time staying in the hardware market.

    Free tablets and ubiquitous computing

    “[In the US,] you will see tablets everywhere,” says Wadhwa. “They will become disposable, and you will see thousands of new applications within a short period of time.”

    Tuli thinks he can eventually bring the Aakash 2 to the US at a $50 retail price, and if trends continue, that price will continue to fall.

    It doesn’t take much imagination to think of applications for devices that cheap. “If I were to start a company today, I’d say what kind of a business can I build if the hardware is almost disposable?” says Goldberg. “In a restaurant, if every waiter or maitre d’ has a tablet, now someone can go build a good restaurant automation tool that links tablets to the chef station.”

    At some point, too, any company that can squeeze enough ads onto this class of tablets will start giving the tablet away for free. (Remember when USB thumb drives became inescapable promotional giveaways?) The commercial version of the Aakash 2, the $70 Ubislate, affords Datawind almost no profit margin at all. But, like Amazon and Google, which have adopted a business model of selling their hardware at cost and making money on content instead (Amazon by selling e-books, and Google by selling ads), Datawind is using Yahoo’s ad marketplace to sell advertisements on the toolbar of apps on the Ubislate.


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  • #2

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    I'm glad to see that it runs on Android. I'm really excited about this tablet. I won't buy one, but now that India is entering our market with their tech, that means tech prices will drop across the board. Pretty soon, I'd bet you will be able to buy brand new smartphones (without a contract upgrade) for less than $200.
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    Quote Originally Posted by ShaneEnochs View Post
    I'm glad to see that it runs on Android. I'm really excited about this tablet. I won't buy one, but now that India is entering our market with their tech, that means tech prices will drop across the board. Pretty soon, I'd bet you will be able to buy brand new smartphones (without a contract upgrade) for less than $200.
    But it's India! They're cheating by using cheap affordable semi-skilled labor!
    The Matrix is a system, Neo. That system is our enemy. But when you're inside, you look around, what do you see? Businessmen, teachers, lawyers, carpenters. The very minds of the people we are trying to save. But until we do, these people are still a part of that system and that makes them our enemy. You have to understand, most of these people are not ready to be unplugged. And many of them are so inured, so hopelessly dependent on the system, that they will fight to protect it.

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    Some specs: http://www.engadget.com/2012/11/11/a...-tablet-india/
    It's the second iteration of what amounts to a barebones, affordable Android slate, packing a 7-inch touch panel, 1GHz Cortex-A8 processor, 512MB of RAM, 4GB of Flash storage, Android 4.0.3, built-in WiFi and a front-facing VGA camera. Reportedly, this one's going to be shipped to Indian students for Rs 1,130 (around $21), while outsiders will be able to snag one for closer to $80. Of course, the difference now is that these kinds of projects aren't quite as novel. Indeed, Chinese megashops are hawking low-rate Android tablets right now for around the same amount, setting a new (low) bar when it comes to pricing on ho hum slates.
    Hands- on review: http://venturebeat.com/2012/09/18/ha...et-i-want-one/
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  • #5

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    It's pretty cool, but the commercial (unsubsidized) price seems to be somewhere between $60 and $80 depending on what story you read. Still seems to be a great deal.

    I'm a big fan of the Raspberry Pi which retails for $35. It doesn't have a touch screen or GPRS radio included, but a hacker could definitely add those on if desired.
    "No matter how noble you try to make it, your good intentions will not compensate for the mistakes that people make; that want to run our lives and run the economy, and reject the principles of private property and making up our own decisions for ourselves." - Ron Paul

  • #6

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    It would be ironic if all the Indians Microsoft hired went back................
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  • #7

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    FYI I prefer brand names. Current prices are not that high for the amount of time I use the tablets and smart phones. But if this makes the stuff I buy cheaper more power to them.
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  • #8

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    Quote Originally Posted by Origanalist View Post
    It would be ironic if all the Indians Microsoft hired went back................
    Why, don't they like being Balmers bitches...
    Bwahahahahaha
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  • #9

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    Quote Originally Posted by brandon View Post
    It's pretty cool, but the commercial (unsubsidized) price seems to be somewhere between $60 and $80 depending on what story you read. Still seems to be a great deal.
    I like it for the same reason I like Bitcoin technology. It's not about first implementations, but the fact that they manifested in the first place--as proof of concept. Once the cat is out of the bag, it can mutate and go viral in successive waves and different forms.

  • #10

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    For this price I think quality control is non-existent and returns are not allowed. Still, if it works, even for just a year at that price, it is one heck of a deal even if it is very slow. Most people use tablets for reading or surfing the web, so speed isn't a very important factor for most tasks done with a tablet.

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