Posts Tagged ‘gadgets’


KOLKATA: Rajeev Shenoy, a Bangalore-based techie (not his real name), splurged nearly Rs46K on his sleek iPhone 5 to experience 4G on-the-go. But his thrill turned to bitterness when he found out his fancy smartphone won’t run on fourth generation networks in India.

The reason: Apple’s new smartphone does not support the TDD or ‘time division duplex’ version of LTE technology that powers 4G networks in India, but runs on its older and more globally trusted variant, FDD or ‘frequency duplex division’, deployed by most 4G operators in the US and Europe. As a result, the iPhone 5 supports LTE or ‘long term evolution’ technology only on the 1.8 GHz band and not on the 2300 MHz band frequencies auctioned in India two years ago.

Varsha Saxena, a graphic artist in Kolkata (again not her real name), suffered a similar fate with her iPad 3 tablet, which supports LTE only on the super efficient 700 MHz band that won’t be available in India for at least another two years. Rajeev and Varsha are on Rs 1999 LTE data plans from Bharti Airtel, the country’s leading mobile carrier and sole LTE operator yet.

Far from being stray cases, they represent the first wave of data-hungry customers who signed up for 4G thrills like video conferencing, interactive gaming, streaming HD movies to making video calls on the move. But, instead, they learnt the hard way that “true bang for the LTE buck” remains a pipedream in a country where 4G services arrived seven months ago.

To be precise, LTE is only nearly 4G. True 4G will arrive only with LTE Advanced. But LTE itself brings with it enormous benefits. It has high spectral efficiency and low latency. It offers lower costs for every megabyte transmitted, high throughput and backward compatibility with existing CDMA technologies. Operators can provide voice-over LTE as well, but the one of the best advantages is in operational efficiency.

Small-cell LTE is nearly-impossible to manage without self-organising networks, which improves operational efficiency. But the march to this ideal state is long and with several hurdles on the way. All buzz about 4G data speeds being at least five times faster than 3G hasn’t really translated into mass LTE adoption levels in India. 4G subscriber growth has failed to happen accentuated by a near non-existent devices ecosystem.

LTE has mind-boggling opportunities but it faces substantial hurdles now, like absence of compatible 4G handsets, pricey data plans, expensive dongles and customer premise equipment — both priced over $92 (Rs 4,999). Paucity of 4G-centric applications, content and services coupled with limited coverage haven’t helped either. Another turn-off undermining 4G experience, claim the users, is the drastic speed rollback from a normal 40 Mbps to a paltry 128 kbps once a customer exhausts his monthly quota of free gigabytes.

The company’s president (consumer business) K Srinivas is quick to stress that it “takes several years for a new mobile broadband technology like TDD-LTE to mature just like 3G took years to gain traction in western markets,” but concedes Airtel’s fledgling 4G operation won’t gain momentum unless it launches LTE in Mumbai and Delhi where it acquired Qualcomm’s wireless broadband permits earlier this year.

Right now, it offers 4G services only in Bangalore, Kolkata and Pune. “Mumbai and Delhi are the two largest data markets and our network teams are working furiously to roll out 4G in both cities at the earliest,” says Srinivas declining to reveal potential launch timelines.

The company, along with China’s Huawei, is also conducting trials of the Huawei-Ascend P1 LTE smartphone, the first TD-LTE-compatible 4G handset in India. However, it is yet to take a call on its pricing. Apple refused to comment on the feature.

“I don’t expect 4G to see any meaningful traction unless Airtel launches the service in high-value markets like Mumbai and Delhi, and more important, till Reliance-owned Infotel Broadband launches,” says consultancy Ovum’s principal telecoms analyst (emerging markets), Shiv Putcha.

Infotel Broadband is the only firm with a pan-India broadband wireless access permit, which allows it to offer high-speed data services on mobile devices. Small wonder, most analysts believe the new telecom policy 2012 (aka NTP 2012) paves the way for Infotel to eventually offer voice services (read: VoIP) over data networks, which they claim, can be a proverbial gamechanger for LTE adoption.

“Infotel Broadband could disrupt established telecom businesses if it can offer cheap VoIP and data services over converged, smart devices,” says Putcha adding that “voice could well be the sweetner in an LTE scenario since there “are no successful cases of data-only telecom businesses worldwide”.

Analysts at Forrester agree Reliance’s 4G service could be a potential gamechanger but say VoIP won’t play a huge part. “Infotel can transform India’s LTE space but not due to VoIP. Apart from some advances by South Korea, ‘VoIP over 4G’ is still at a nascent stage globally and call quality remains poor,” says Katyayan Gupta, analyst & connectivity lead (Asia-Pacific & Japan) at Forrester.

Gupta believes Reliance’s comparative 4G edge lies in the ability to build better economies of scale by offering a pan-India service, attracting more customers by offering nationwide 4G roaming – since NTP 2012 has abolished roaming — and even subsidising 4G devices like CPEs and dongles by leveraging scale.

Industry experts aware of developments claim Reliance has approached the telecom department to conduct VoIP trials on its TDD-LTE network in the run up to launching 4G services in Mumbai and Delhi, but Reliance did not reply to ET’s specific queries. The company is also tight-lipped on the launch of its 4G services originally expected in June.

Former VSNL chairman BK Syngal, who is now senior principal at Dua Consulting, says Reliance-controlled Infotel Broadband may not be able to immediately offer VoIP services on a 4G data network. “Reliance only has an ISP licence which allowed it to acquire BWA airwaves to provide data services nationally.

He also believes it is early days for TDD-LTE tech since the device ecosystem on this platform trails the more evolved FDD version and mass adoption in India could be nearlythree years away.

Ovum’s Putcha and Forrester’s Gupta believe mass TDD-LTE adoption may not take that long given the surge in global industry support for this version. “Network vendors may be more focused on FDD now but chipset vendors are rapidly developing dual-mode chips that support both TDD and FDD variants of LTE,” says Gupta adding that TDD shares most of the FDD designs and standards and uses a common core network, which is why, the world’s top network gear vendors like Nokia Siemens Network and Huawei to chipset vendors like Qualcomm, Samsung and Broadcom are supporting the TDD-LTE platform.

Bharti Airtel’s Srinivas seconds this claiming over 100 global telecom carriers are currently at various stages of deploying TDD-LTE, even though the total number of 4G operators backing FDD worldwide exceeds 400. In fact, the seeds of the LTE ecosystem were sown when Airtel teamed up with some of the biggest TDD-LTE backers like Japan’s Softbank Mobile and China Mobile at the 2011 Mobile World Congress in Barcelona to launch the Global TD-LTE Initiative (GTI).

User number potential are not insignificant either. Ovum expects India to have 37 million TDD-LTE subscribers by 2017 while Forrester pegs it at nearly 50 million by 2018.

Spectrum availability remains a concern though. Airtel’s Srinivas declines to confirm whether the firm would put all LTE expansions on hold till the government auctions airwaves in the 700 MHz band considered thrice more efficient than the 2300 MHz frequencies auctioned in 2010. Forrester’s Gupta feels stalling expansion or rollout plans may be a dumb thing to do since Airtel “cannot sit on licensed spectrum for too long as it would be unwise not to lock customers before Reliance launches.”

Most stakeholders also believe an evolved TD-LTE ecosystem opens up efficient multi-network management scenarios, in that, it can be an enabler of ‘self-organising networks’ or SONs.

“Self-organising networks are likely to be a hit with telcos in India, especially since many domestic carriers may soon be managing multiple technology networks in the forseeable future,” says Gupta of Forrester.

5 hot smartphones under Rs 20,000.


Planning to buy a new phone soon but confused by all the technical jargon and the number of smartphones available in the market today? Worry not. If you are looking to purchase a swanky new sub-Rs 20,000 smartphone, then look no further. We have compiled a list of five hot smartphones available in India today that cost less than Rs 20,000 and have all the latest features.

LG Optimus L7 – Rs 15,529

The LG Optimus L7 can be purchased for Rs 18,990 and sports a 4.3-inch display with a 480×800 pixels resolution. The smartphone is powered by a 1GHz Cortex A5 processor running Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich and has a 5-megapixel rear camera with autofocus and LED flash and a front-facing VGA camera.

With thickness of just 8.7mm thick. Other features include Wi-Fi and 3G connectivity, Bluetooth 3.0, Wi-Fi Direct, DLNA and a-GPS. It includes 512MB of RAM and comes with 4GB of internal memory. It can be expanded up to 32GB via a microSD card. It includes a 1700 mAh battery.

Nokia Lumia 800 – Rs 17,799

The Windows Phone 7.5-powered Lumia 800, from the house of Nokia, comes at Rs 17,799. The smartphone sports a 3.7-inch ClearBlack display and is powered by a 1.4 GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon processor. It has 16GB of built-in storage but does not support microSD card for expandable storage. Connectivity features in the device include 2G, 3G, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 2.1 and microUSB.

Motorola Atrix 2 – Rs 17,999

This device runs on Android 4.0 (Ice Cream Sandwich) and is powered by a dual-core OMAP processor clocked at 1GHz is now available at Rs 17,999. The Motorola Atrix 2 sports a 4.3-inch qHD display with Gorilla Glass protection, it includes 1GB RAM and 8GB of built-in storage, along with support for 32GB expandable memory via microSD card.

Atrix 2 has an 8-megapixel rear camera with 1080p video recording, a secondary front facing camera with VGA quality, and includes a 1,735 mAh battery which is rated for up to 8 hours, 50 mins of talktime.

Sony Xperia J – Rs 18,399

Sony Xperia J sports a 4-inch touchscreen of 480 x 854 resolution, sheathed by a scratch resistant gorilla glass display. It is powered by a 1GHz Qualcomm MSM7227A Snapdragon processor with 512MB of RAM and 4GB internal memory (usable up to 2GB only). It comes with pre-installed Android 4.0 (Ice Cream Sandwich) and it will receive and is scheduled to receive Android 4.1 (Jelly Bean) update in 2013.

The phone’s memory is expandable up to 32GB via the microSD slot available and has a powerful 1,750mAh battery which will provide you with a talk-time of up to 7hours (3G).

HTC Desire X – Rs 19,799

This is an Android 4.0 (Ice Cream Sandwich) based device powered by a 1GHz dual-core Snapdragon S4 processor, coupled with 768MB of RAM. Additionally, it includes 4GB of built-in storage capacity, a microSD card for expandable storage and a 1,650 mAh battery.

The HTC Desire X is equipped with a 5-megapixel rear camera with autofocus, f/2.0 aperture, 28mm wide angle lens, BSI sensor and LED flash. It does not include a front facing camera, unlike most of the new Android smartphones.

The device has been up for grabs at a best buy price of Rs 19,799.


he good: The Samsung Chromebook is a lightweight, thin, and inexpensive laptop for those times when all you need is a powerful browser.
The bad: The Chromebook’s low price comes out in its build quality and performance.
The bottom line: The $249 Samsung Chromebook is a good extra computer for cloud-loving Google-centric Web users.
With Google Chromebooks, price really does make all the difference. (more…)


Amazon began shipping its 8.9-inch Kindle Fire HD on Thursday, ahead of its original planned schedule. The specs and price point of the device are interesting enough that it will certainly make some inroads in the tablet market: Among other features, it sports a front-facing HD camera, 16-GB or 32-GB storage options, and 10 hours of battery life.

The 16-GB model is priced at US$299 and the 32 GB at $369. Later this month, an LTE option will ship for $500.
Content Is King

Amazon is lucky among tablet makers, of course, in that its primary goal is not necessarily to make much — or even any — profit from hardware sales. Its interest lies in the anticipated revenue stream from content users buy or rent to consume on the device.

This approach to the market allows Amazon to try just about anything it thinks will meet market demand. Whether it will or not — try anything, that is — is a matter of debate.

The Full-Sized Tablet Market

The 8.9-inch form factor was a bet Amazon had to make if it wanted to go head-to-head with Apple’s full-sized iPad, and it exhibited some confidence going into this venture.

“What few know is that while the larger and more expensive Kindle didn’t sell as well as the original size, the users were far more active and loyal,” Rob Enderle, principal of the Enderle Group, told the E-Commerce Times. “Keeping your most loyal users happy is a good strategy for any vendor.”

The 8.9-inch model completes Amazon’s line of Fire tablets and Paperwhite e-readers, and Amazon will expand into other areas only if this model moves well, he predicted.

“They aren’t interested in becoming a generic device maker — at least not at the moment,” Enderle said.

Competing With the Surface

However, Amazon is interested in taking down its competition, which now includes Microsoft’s Surface tablet.

As it continues to compete with the iPad — and now the Surface as well — Amazon could find itself focusing more on expensive, high-end hardware.

The head of Amazon’s Kindle division, Mike Nash, spent 20 years at Microsoft, noted Laura DiDio, principal of ITIC. “He is a very savvy marketer who has worked on many different projects at Microsoft. I don’t think Amazon has fully leveraged his expertise — not yet, at least. There is more to come from him.”

Amazon’s next move will be to take on the Surface with a more full-featured product, she predicted.

“Amazon seems to be watching and trying to improve on both Apple and Microsoft,” observed DiDio. “They are saying to consumers, ‘we can innovate too, and we can do it at a lower price.'”

That’s All, Folks

Then again, Amazon might be hesitant to stray far from its content-oriented business model.

“While the Kindle is clearly a media consumption device, Microsoft is positioning the Surface more as a general- purpose computing platform that supports well-known productivity apps,” Charles King, principal of Pund-IT, told the E-Commerce Times.

“Frankly, I don’t think Amazon is capable of playing that angle unless it has something up its sleeve in apps,” he said.

“Google is a much clearer opponent of the Surface in this sense, given the strength of its Docs, Calendar, Gmail, and other services — let along the size of the Android app market,” King pointed out.

Amazon also must consider that other vendors are attempting to make content plays, Azita Arvani of the Arvani Group told the E-Commerce Times.

“The competition has changed on the content side of the tablet market,” she said. “Apple, Amazon and Google are all trying to not just sell devices, but use the devices as a conduit to sell other digital goods.”