China-based Ainol is shipping a $100 Ice Cream Sandwich tablet. It's also headed to the U.S.
(Credit: Ainol Electronics)
Move over, Kindle Fire. Google's Ice Cream Sandwich operating system has landed on a $100
tablet now shipping in China. The 7-inch tablet is also bound for the U.S. market.
U.S.-based MIPS Technologies and Ingenic Semiconductor, a China-based mobile chip provider, announced worldwide availability of the "world's first tablet" based on
Android 4.0, aka Ice Cream Sandwich.
"I'm thrilled to see the entrance of MIPS-Based Android 4.0 tablets into the market. Low cost, high performance tablets are a big win for mobile consumers and a strong illustration of how Android's openness drives innovation and competition for the benefit of consumers around the world," Andy Rubin, senior vice president of mobile at Google, said in a statement.
The tablet is available in China and online
through Ainol Electronics and will be available in the U.S. and other geographies within the next several months under brands from companies including Leader International and OMG Electronics.
Larger 8- and 9-inch form factors will be available soon.
Salient specs include Ingenic's MIPS-based JZ4770 processor running at 1GHz, graphics based on a Vivante GC860 graphics processing unit, 1080p video decoding, dual front/rear cameras, a 7-inch capacitive multi-touch screen, WiFi, and USB 2.0, HDMI 1.3 and microSD ports.