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The Aakash tablet's pros and cons
| Pros | Cons | 
|---|---|
|           Size and weight |               Inferior touch screen |    
|           Low price |               Low battery life |    
|           Memory card slot |               Limited apps |    
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 think a $60 hand-held Android  tablet might trigger midnight queues and riots. Or at least get tech  columnists really excited.
But India's super cheap tablet was launched to a less-than-rousing reception, thanks to a history of false starts and hype.
When first announced, the Aakash prototype turned out to be  not much more than an oversized memory box. Its ancestor, the functional  hand-held Simputer, had flopped over and died.
This tablet started its life as Sakshat, with a $35  subsidised price tag for students. In its shipping form, it's called  Aakash, and it will cost 2,999 rupees ($62).
I wasn't expecting much when I took it out of the box, but I was pleasantly surprised.
This wasn't another shoddy prototype: it was a full production unit, packaged and shrink-wrapped and "properly" factory-made.
I liked the almost-pocketable size and weight, which reminded  me of Samsung's 7" Galaxy Tab, a very capable and underrated Android  tablet that died before its prime. 
But there, the similarities with the Tab ended.
The Aakash wouldn't start until charged for about five  minutes. We're rather used to out-of-the-box power on; this device does  not appear to hold charge for long even when switched off (it should  have been factory-charged, for testing).
   Mixed feelings        My first action on screen, the Android "unlock" swipe, showed up the rough edges of the display technology.
To cut costs, the Aakash uses a resistive touch-screen, instead of the now common capacitive variety.
Resistive touch uses a pressure-sensitive overlay, and is  better suited to a stylus than a bare finger. The Aakash's touch  sensitivity and speed are lower than what we're used to with today's  touch-screens. (Resistive touch can be very precise, but is rarely so in  the cheaper varieties.)
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Probably the biggest challenge for the Aakash would be to keep up with the times”
It also uses lower specs than we're now used to with tablets and netbooks.
There's 256 MB of memory and 2GB of storage (tablets start at  512MB and 16GB today), and a slow 366 MHz processor (a third of the  1GHz norm).
There's built-in wi-fi in this basic Aakash tablet. Another  version, which I could not get hold of, has GPRS data connectivity, with  3G planned later.
What they've added on beyond the average tablet is two USB sockets.
I have mixed feelings about this probably-unique feature in the tablet world. 
USB lets you use cheap "memory sticks", but having that stick  jutting out of the top of a small tablet can make it unwieldy. And two  of these slots? 
The micro-SD card slot is a good thing, and I miss that in my iPad (Apple doesn't believe in expandability).
So what about the "made in India" part?
The Aakash Ubislate is assembled in DataWind's Hyderabad  factory. The plant has a capacity of about 2,000 units a month, to be  "eventually" ramped up to 100,000 a month. 
As you'd expect in this global age, parts are sourced from  all over the world. To try to "make" everything in any one country,  whether India or the US, would be stupid. About a 10th of the  components, by value, are locally sourced.
And the overall design (including adding USB!), the  integration and the testing are probably all Indian. None of this is  trivial.
If you're an Android user, the big thing you'll miss on the Aakash is the Android Market. 
That's where you'd usually go to for downloading or buying  apps, as with Apple's App Store. Instead, there is GetJar, a relatively  limited service mostly selling apps for phones.
The tablet's low-end specs are probably a good reason to  limit functionality and apps. But removing Android Market does mean no  access to the hundreds of thousands of Android tablet apps out there.
The other reason could be application focus: so that students  using the Aakash stay with a limited set of apps, both to avoid  distraction, and to avoid slowing things down to unusable levels.
All this would be less relevant if there were great educational content ready. There isn't.
Yes, delivering a tablet for $60 has taken hard work, extraordinary sourcing and some innovation.
But this is just a part of the uphill road to a successful  device that could change education in India. There are many more pieces  needed to complete that picture.
As the Simputer in India and so many iPad-wannabe tablets in the world have shown, it isn't about the hardware.
Great hardware is a sine qua non, but what you really need are the apps and content ecosystem.
While the courseware development happens, the world will move on, with even better tablets that leave the Aakash further behind.
And while I like the 7" size for its portability, students will  find it less friendly than a 10" display for educational apps. But yes,  that would cost more.
And the battery is rated for three hours; we got a bit over  two. The Aakash warms up in use. That means precious battery power is  going away as heat.
So every school kid who uses it will probably need a charging  socket in their desk. And that's not likely to happen soon. Leaving it  to charge repeatedly in common areas is not practical, for a variety of  reasons.
Cheaper plastics and a flimsy screen cover don't bode well  for heavy student use. Nor for serviceability: after removing the inside  screws, I couldn't put them back because the plastic threads had  slipped.
Probably the biggest challenge for the Aakash will be to keep  up with the times. That's what killed the Simputer - other than apps,  by the time they tweak it and test it, portable computers will have  jumped a generation.
Which is why it makes little sense to spend this much time and effort in "made in India" development.
So what other device could the Indian government have picked  to subsidise? My bet would be either a cheap standard netbook, or an  ultra-cheap, usable e-book reader that instantly access the vast amount  of almost-ready content.
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