Archos Arnova 8 and 10 tablets,
French manufacturer Archos is best known for its portable media players,
and has also been previewing and churning out low cost tablets since CES last year,
with the Archos 7 Home Tablet making waves amongst others.
It has now introduced three new inexpensive devices at CeBIT:
a colour e-reader called Archos 7ob, the Archos Arnova 8 and Arnova 10.
All these devices are supposedly priced at under Rs. 10,000,
With the 8-inch Arnovo 8 to retail for $150,
and the 10.1-inch Arnova 10 for $199 when they go on sale sometime in the next three weeks.
While at first glance these inexpensive tablets seem too good to be true, not all is illusion –
they do have the bare minimum required to do the job, and arguably fit the bill.
The Archos Arnova 10 runs Android 2.1, and has no announced update plan.
It has a resistive touchscreen, a Rockchip RK2818 600MHz processor,
8GB of internal storage (apart from microSD expandability).
The Arnova 8 has a smaller resistive screen, the same processor,
4GB of internal storage. Both tablets have no official access to the Android Market.
However, Archos does have its own app store, AppsLib, with over 10,000 apps.
For those who just have to have Android Market onboard, there is no need to get too turned off the Arnova.
The fan forum ArchosFans had already rescued previous
Archos Android tablets from a Market-less fate,
Their gApps4Archos.apk, the Android Market to work when it is sideloaded onto
the tablets. Check out a fan video introducing the latest low-cost Arnova tablets below:
French manufacturer Archos is best known for its portable media players,
and has also been previewing and churning out low cost tablets since CES last year,
with the Archos 7 Home Tablet making waves amongst others.
It has now introduced three new inexpensive devices at CeBIT:
a colour e-reader called Archos 7ob, the Archos Arnova 8 and Arnova 10.
All these devices are supposedly priced at under Rs. 10,000,
With the 8-inch Arnovo 8 to retail for $150,
and the 10.1-inch Arnova 10 for $199 when they go on sale sometime in the next three weeks.
While at first glance these inexpensive tablets seem too good to be true, not all is illusion –
they do have the bare minimum required to do the job, and arguably fit the bill.
The Archos Arnova 10 runs Android 2.1, and has no announced update plan.
It has a resistive touchscreen, a Rockchip RK2818 600MHz processor,
8GB of internal storage (apart from microSD expandability).
The Arnova 8 has a smaller resistive screen, the same processor,
4GB of internal storage. Both tablets have no official access to the Android Market.
However, Archos does have its own app store, AppsLib, with over 10,000 apps.
For those who just have to have Android Market onboard, there is no need to get too turned off the Arnova.
The fan forum ArchosFans had already rescued previous
Archos Android tablets from a Market-less fate,
Their gApps4Archos.apk, the Android Market to work when it is sideloaded onto
the tablets. Check out a fan video introducing the latest low-cost Arnova tablets below:
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