![]() | |
Kapil Sibal's not resting after the explosion of interest that followed the initial launch of the $60 Aakash education tablet. He's now pushing to get the rebadged DataWind Ubislate 7 into the hands of students free of charge, rather than the $35 they currently pay. The plan is to offer a 50 percent government subsidy for each unit, with education institutions fronting the other half, but only if inclined to do so. He's also pushing for the tablet to be manufactured domestically rather than imported — hoping that the comforts of home will enable it to spread nationwide. |
Artikel Terkait:
Other
- Kouziro crafts wired-only, 21.5-inch Android 4.0 mega tablet
- Le Pan II receives Android 4.0.4 Ice Cream Sandwich update at long last
- Hyundai reportedly launching three Android tablets in Russia this year
- More proof of a Nexus tablet launching at Google I/O this month emerges
- Tablets and smartphones are turning handheld gaming devices into a niche
- HBO GO now available for Amazon Kindle Fire
- Tactus' morphing smartphone and tablet display hands-on
- Google tablet spotted in the wild?
- Apple continues to dominate tablet market, Kindle Fire demand fizzles
- POV announces ProTab 2 Android 4.0 tablet for $400
0 comments:
Post a Comment