• put your amazing slogan here!

    Aakash II Tablet Ready for Release



    Aakash is a series of Android-based tablet computers produced by British company DataWind. It is manufactured by the India-based company Quad, at a new production centre in Hyderabad, under a trial run of 100,000 units.The tablet was officially launched as the Aakash in New Delhi on 5 October 2011. The Indian HRD ministry projects introduction of an upgraded second-generation model called Aakash 2 in April 2012.
    The Aakash is a low-cost tablet computer with a 7-inch touch screenARM 11 processor and 256 MB RAM running under the Android 2.2 operating system. It has two universal serial bus (USB) ports and delivers high definition (HD) quality video. For applications, the Aakash will have access to Getjar, an independent market, rather than the Android Market.

     Packed with more features and enhanced speed, an upgraded version of low cost computing device Aakash is ready for release, HRD Minister Kapil Sibal today said. 

    "Unlike other tablet devices, Aakash can also be used to create computer programs, in Python,CC++ and Scilab," he said, adding it can be further used for accessing e-governance services. 

    UK-based Datawind, which had submitted about 100 tablets to IIT-Bombay for testing, said the government has approved the specifications for the upgraded version and it will be launched soon in the market. 

    "The government has approved the specifications," Datawind CEO Sunit Singh Tuli told. 

    HRD Ministry sources said the launch of the upgraded version could be around the first week of July. 

    Asked about the production for Aakash 2, Tuli said it will start a few days before the launch of the device in the market. 

    Tuli added that a good number of devices will be produced before the official launch. 

    Datawind had hit headlines last October when it unveiled Aakash, to be supplied to the HRD Ministry at Rs 2,276 a piece. The government, in turn, had to give about one lakh of these tablets to the students at subsidised price Rs 1,100-1,200 each. 

    However, 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. 

    Ever since its launch last year, the project has been running behind schedule. 

    Inaugurating a teacher training programme conducted by IIT-Bombay under 'talk to a teacher' project of the National Mission on Education through ICT, Sibal suggested IIT-Bombay Director Devang Khakhar to present Aakash devices to heads of a few institutions associated with the training programme. 

    A representative of IIT Bombay symbolically presented an Aakash tablet to the minister. 

    Sibal thanked IIT-Bombay for doing a "wonderful" job in incorporating useful software to Aakash.

    2 comments:

    1. Aakash can be a good choice from its cost perspective but from its processing point of view, I don't think it will be a good choice. However, we can expect some improvements in its newer version.

      ReplyDelete
      Replies
      1. You Are Right..But We Can't Expect More Such Features At Cheap Prices..Using Aakash is Extremely Radical Suggestion...

        Delete

     

    Blogger news

     

    About

    Blogroll