Monday, November 26, 2012

Aakash2 tablets made in China for expediency: Datawind




UK based Datawind on Saturday said that it manufactured about 10,000 Aakash2 tablets in China for the sake of 'expediency', as it couldn't get any supplier in India to start assembling the tablets in time. "For the first 10,000 units (of Aakash2) for IIT, and for expediency sake we had the motherboards and kits manufactured in our Chinese subcontractor's facilities, and then the units have been 'kitted' in China at various manufacturers for expediency," said Suneet Singh Tuli, Datawind CEO.

BMW, Audi, Mercedes-Benz offer discounts of Rs 10 lakh on some models




BMW, Audi and Mercedes-Benz have driven in the steepest discounts yet in the Indian luxury car market, a shift of gears forced by the sluggish sales that have reduced the race to the annual targets of these companies to a crawl.

The three carmakers and their dealers are together offering discounts of up to 15 per cent, or a whopping Rs 10 lakh, on some models, ET has learnt after checking out the market, as these companies are staring at a low single-digit growth after clocking 30 per cent annual growth over the past five years.

Apple Samsung lawsuit: six more products under scrutiny

Apple has added six more Samsung products, including the Galaxy Note II, to its patent lawsuit against the company.




Documents filed to the San Jose federal court in California on November 23 list six Samsung products running the "Jelly Bean" and "Ice Cream Sandwich" operating systems, which Apple claims infringe its patents.
The six phones and tablets affected are the Galaxy S III, running the new Jelly Bean system, the Galaxy Tab 8.9 Wifi tablet, the Galaxy Tab 2 10.1, Galaxy Rugby Pro and Galaxy S III mini.
Apple stated it had “acted quickly and diligently" in order to "determine that these newly released products do infringe many of the same claims already asserted by Apple."
In August, Samsung lost a US patent case to Apple and was ordered to pay its rival $1.05bn (£0.66bn) in damages for copying features of the iPad and iPhone in its Galaxy range of devices. Samsung, which is the world's top mobile phone maker, is appealing the ruling.
A similar case in the UK found in Samsung's favour and ordered Apple to publish an apology making clear that the South Korean firm had not copied its iPad when designing its own devices.

Nokia bets on Asha series phones to regain market share



It's been a year since Nokia's Chief Executive Officer Stephen Elop launched the Asha series of feature phones targeting millions of Indians in the low-cost mobile phone market. Since then, Asha has become one of the best-selling handset series in the country. But has it helped the Finnish handset maker regain its popularity among the masses? Probably not.

"In terms of market share, I don't think they have come back," Gartner's principal research analyst Anshul Gupta says. "However, with successful launch of Asha series devices, Nokia has been able to stabilize its share in recent past," he adds.

Gupta says Asha is a very good device in the Rs 4,000-Rs 6,000 price point with touch user interface and some apps that are found in smartphones. "From that perspective, it is getting competitive and getting market share. But Nokia is still being challenged in the overall market," he says.

During the first six months of the year, Nokia managed to get the largest share of shipments, more than 22 per cent share of 102.43 million mobile phones coming into India, CyberMedia Research said in a report last month. Samsung and Micromax followed with 13 per cent and 5.5 per cent share, respectively.

But this has only helped Nokia arrest its fall in the market, not regain the market share it lost to Samsung, BlackBerry and local players such as Micromax and Karbonn in both the high-end and low-end of Rs 31,000-cr handset market in recent years.

Sari Harju, Nokia's head of mobile phones in India, says the Asha range has been very well received in India, and its most popular model, Asha 305, is sold out at all retail outlets. "That's a very good situation to be in. We're pleased with the development and traction we've got from customers in India," she says.

On Monday, the company introduced a new Asha 205 with a feature called 'Slam' that allows users to share any kind of data on Bluetooth without using internet data. The device along with the Nokia 206 will be available next month for under Rs 3,000.

Nokia sold 6.5 million Asha devices in the July-September quarter across the world.

NOKIA'S BIGGEST HOPE

Clearly, Asha is what gives hope to Nokia. Under Asha, Nokia offers full touch devices that offer a smartphone-like experience, complete with a capable web browser, exchange email support and gaming.

Vaibhav Sharma, founding editor of The Handheld Blog that specialises in covering Nokia devices, says the Asha lineup has been a huge pillar of strength for Nokia with increasing sales that go against the international trend of people moving away from feature phones.

Nokia's initial focus was to plug the QWERTY and dual-SIM gap in its portfolio and offer feature-rich devices at low prices points. However, the move away from Symbian and the cost of making Windows Phone devices meant that Nokia needed something in the low-mid end segment to fight off competition from low-cost touch-based phones, he says. That's how Asha happened.

Faisal Kawoosa, lead analyst at CMR Telecom Practice, says, "In a way Asha has really become the 'asha' of Nokia."

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