The development comes a week later after India's second largest mobile services company, Reliance Communications Ltd., launched a $286 7-inch Android tablet to capitalize on the expected demand for cheap computing devices in the world's fastest-growing and second-largest mobile phone market.
Indians, mostly in the country's rural areas, are expected to skip buying personal computers to adopt cheaper tablet computers to access internet, like they bought mobile phones to access telephone services before owning a landline phone.
Phone services companies like Bharti Airtel Ltd.--India's largest mobile-phone company by users--Reliance Communications and Idea Cellular Ltd., expect increased data usage to help boost revenue and margins in a market where stiff competition has kept call tariffs at less than one U.S. cent a minute. Telecom and Internet services providers paid more than $22.7 billion to the Indian government in 2010 for bandwidth to offer 3G telephony and broadband wireless Internet.
Beetel Magiq, Beetel Teletech's tablet, has a mobile radio and WiFi chip and runs on Android 2.2, a press release from the Indian company said. The tablet runs on an unnamed 1 Gigahertz chipset and contains a front and rear facing 2 megapixel camera, the release added.
On Aug. 10, Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd. launched its 10.1-inch and 8.9-inch tablets in India for $799 and $750 respectively. Apple Inc. sells its iPad 2 in India at prices starting at $499 for the 16 gigabyte WiFi-only unit, while Research In Motion Ltd. sells its 7-inch PlayBook in India for $617.
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