World's cheapest tablet from India -cost just $40

The Aakash tablet, developed through a partnership between the Indian government and the Canadian company DataWind and manufactured in India, was presented in 2011 and 2012 as a technological breakthrough that could transform educational access for India's hundreds of millions of students — a device so inexpensive that even low-income families could afford it, designed to bridge the digital divide that remained one of the most significant structural barriers to equal educational opportunity.
At a price point that the government announced at $35–$40 for the subsidized version (sold to students), the Aakash was positioned as the world's cheapest tablet, a claim that generated enormous international attention and considerable skepticism from technology reviewers.
The skepticism proved largely warranted. Early reviews of the device documented significant technical shortcomings: a slow processor, limited battery life, a resistive touchscreen that was considerably less responsive than the capacitive screens standard on comparable devices at higher price points, and connectivity limitations. The gap between the announcement-day specifications and the actual shipped product was wide enough to generate considerable disillusionment among educators and students who had anticipated something more capable.
The project also ran into manufacturing and supply chain difficulties. Orders were delayed. Quality control was inconsistent. The government's ambitious targets for distribution — millions of units to students — were not met on the promised timelines.
DataWind's Suneet Singh Tuli, the project's chief advocate, maintained that the challenges were temporary and that subsequent generations of the device would address the shortcomings. Subsequent versions did show improvement.
The Aakash's legacy was a complicated one: genuine innovation in low-cost hardware design, genuine aspiration toward educational equity, and genuine shortfall between what was promised and what was delivered.
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