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The $35 indian tablet isn't vaporware

34 points| blntechie | 15 years ago |techradar.com | reply

13 comments

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[+] wccrawford|15 years ago|reply
If it doesn't exist yet, it's vaporware until it does. Any time a device claims things that it hasn't yet actually produced, that's vaporware.
[+] cryptoz|15 years ago|reply
I disagree. There are discussions of Ubuntu 11.04 on mailing lists, but absolutely nothing has been produced yet.

Are you suggesting that Ubuntu 11.04 is vaporware until development starts? WTF?

Edit: Vaporware is a product that we were told was going to come out, but didn't. Vaporware isn't used to describe products that aren't even supposed to be released yet!

[+] tmcw|15 years ago|reply
So, this article is a government minister telling you that it isn't vaporware? And ending with the words "Never be sceptical of the government."?

Yeah...

[+] GiraffeNecktie|15 years ago|reply
Of the $35, which equates to INR 1500, INR 750 is government subsidy.

So it's really a $70 tablet. That's a lot more plausible given that you can already buy Chinese-built Android tablets for less than $100.

[+] bartl|15 years ago|reply
My calculation ($35 + half that) comes to a figure of about $50.
[+] whatajoke|15 years ago|reply
You are reading it wrong. It means that the end customer (student) will get it at 50% subsidy, which will be 17.5$
[+] edge17|15 years ago|reply
Someone was telling me that typically hardware markup is 3x-4x from the bill of material to the retail price, but in India it's more like 5x-6x because of customs and duty overheads. Anyone care to comment?
[+] ravichhabra|15 years ago|reply
It is ironic that the Indian Tablet would run an OS that does not support it's languages (Devanagari, Tamil, Telugu, Gurumukhi, Bengali, the list goes on). Perhaps they should take on Microsoft's offer of running CE on it for free.