Too low not to buy this India's $4 smartphone: Too good to be true?

 You could win this smart phone at 4$Usds Only Find out more .....



What's the real story behind India's $4 smartphone? Just days after launching with enormous buzz, a cutting-edge device with a rock-bottom price is being blasted by industry officials and analysts. Ringing Bells unveiled its Freedom 251 smartphone on Wednesday, touting features that included a 4-inch display, 1.3-GHz quad-core processor and 8 GB of storage. The "made-in-India" product was listed for just 251 rupees ($3.65), a price with the potential to revolutionize India's devices market and make Internet access affordable for tens of millions of people. One problem: Industry insiders say the deal is too good to be true.

"This seems to be a joke or a scam. It is something we are very upset about," said Pankaj Mohindroo, national president of the Indian Cellular Association. "This is being investigated by various government authorities."

In a letter to India's Minister for Communications and I.T., Mohindroo said that even when using the cheapest components, such a phone would cost at least 2700 rupees ($40) to produce. After counting taxes and duties, the price should be at least 3500 rupees ($52).

From Popular Mechanics

If you've ever wished your smartphone was less of an "investment" an Indian company called Ringing Bells has the device for you. With a price of 251 rupees, the Freedom 251 costs roughly $3.50. Forget worrying about breaking it, that's cheap enough that it's almost not worth bending over to pick it up.

The phone, which runs the relatively recent Android 5.1 Lollipop, has a 4-inch 960 × 560 display, nothing that will blow you away but definitely "good enough." The same applies to the rest of the specs like a 1 GB RAM, 8 GB internal memory, and a 3.2 megapixel rear camera. None of this is great by any means but like four dollars, man.

The best part? There's no contract required. You can buy one of these with no strings attached. Assuming that you live in India, anyway. The rest of us are stuck with slightly more expensive (but still fantastic) budget options.

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