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 ...
An upgraded version of the Aakash tablet is underway, which was speculated to cost more than the Aakash. However, Telecom and HRD Minister Kapil Sibal has allayed such concerns, while also claiming ...
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 ...
Suneet Singh Tuli: creator of India's groundbreaking £25 Aakash tablet computer. The entry-level model of the Aakash budget tablet, which is revolutionising education in the developing world, should ...
India's recently launched Aakash is the world's cheapest touch-screen tablet computer - with an off-the-shelf price of about $60. Should we all run out to buy one? In this tablet-crazy age, you'd ...
Maybe because the government publicity machine was not so well-oiled then!Even before a tenth of the promised 100,000 devices was delivered, tested and given an OK by the testing labs at IIT Bombay ...
NEW DELHI (Reuters) - Aakash, the "$35" computer launched last year in India as the world's cheapest tablet, has run into problems and companies will be invited to bid again to make the device after ...
There are 1.2 billion people in India, though currently only 8 percent of that number have access to the internet. That's a figure Canadian company DataWind is hoping will change thanks to its Aakash ...
DataWind, the vendor of India’s low-cost Aakash tablet, said it was not under any contractual obligation to assemble the product in India. The company’s CEO Suneet Singh Tuli said in a telephone ...
<div>The fate of the much touted low-cost computing device Aakash looks uncertain with the government on Friday, 22 March 2013, conceding that there has been a &quot ...
NEW DELHI -- India introduced an inexpensive tablet computer Wednesday, saying it would deliver modern technology to the countryside to help lift villagers out of poverty. The computer, called Aakash, ...