That's what is keeping vendors like Datawind, Milagrow, Spice, Beetel, HCL, Reliance and Lenovo, among others, optimistic.
According to CMR data, Indian consumers will buy around 85,000 tablet PCs in 2012, and already the market has attracted over 15 players with their tablet PC models.
The cheapest of the lot is Datawind's Aakash tablet, priced at nearly Rs 1,800 albeit for student buyers.
Suneet Singh Tuli, CEO of Datawind reasons, "The multimedia experience, fast Internet and the price is what makes Aakash different from others."
The company, informs Tuli, has rejected a few bulk orders from business houses and will build its name first in the education sector before diversifying.
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Students with the world's cheapest tablet computer in New Delhi on October 5, 2011. Aakash will be sold to students at the subsidised price of $35.
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