Micromax has launched a new 4G-enabled smartphone in India, the Canvas
Pulse 4G, priced at Rs. 9,999. The smartphone will go on sale
exclusively via Flipkart starting Tuesday.
This is the company's third launch this month following the unveiling of the Canvas Mega (E353) and Canvas Mega 4G (Q417) at Rs. 7,999 and Rs. 10,999 respectively last week. The new Micromax Canvas Pulse 4G supports Indian LTE bands and also comes with dual-SIM dual standby support.
For specifications, the Canvas Pulse 4G runs Android 5.1 Lollipop out-of-the-box and comes with a 5-inch HD (720x1280 pixels) display. The smartphone is powered by a 1.3GHz octa-core MediaTek (MT6753) processor coupled with 3GB of RAM. It comes with 16GB of inbuilt storage, which is further expandable via microSD card (up to 32GB).
(Also see: Micromax Canvas Pulse 4G vs. Micromax Canvas Mega 4G Q417)
It sports a 13-megapixel rear autofocus camera with LED flash, while there is a secondary 5-megapixel front-facing camera also on board. On the connectivity front, the Canvas Pulse 4G offers 3G, GPRS/ EDGE, Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n, Micro-USB, and Bluetooth options. The smartphone packs a 2100mAh battery and will be available in Black colour. It packs sensors such as accelerometer, ambient light sensor, magnetometer, and proximity sensor.
The company in a press statement confirmed that in strategic partnership with Flipkart on the Micromax Xpress smartphones this year, it sold over 500,000 units of Xpress devices in less than 5 months. Micromax also announced a partnership with Airtel to provide an introductory 4G double data offer for a period of 6 months across its entire 4G range of smartphones.
Commenting on the launch, Vineet Taneja, CEO, Micromax Informatics Ltd said, "Our latest launch, Canvas Pulse 4G is our premium yet powerful product with Flipkart offering 3GB RAM and octa-core at a never before price reiterating our commitment to democratizing technology for the new age digital natives who want to be connected all the time. Our strategic partnership with Flipkart has helped us consolidate our strong foothold in the value for money segment of the online channel and with this launch we are aiming to target the premium segment of our target audience."
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reviews, and exclusive deals on the popular mobiles.
This is the company's third launch this month following the unveiling of the Canvas Mega (E353) and Canvas Mega 4G (Q417) at Rs. 7,999 and Rs. 10,999 respectively last week. The new Micromax Canvas Pulse 4G supports Indian LTE bands and also comes with dual-SIM dual standby support.
For specifications, the Canvas Pulse 4G runs Android 5.1 Lollipop out-of-the-box and comes with a 5-inch HD (720x1280 pixels) display. The smartphone is powered by a 1.3GHz octa-core MediaTek (MT6753) processor coupled with 3GB of RAM. It comes with 16GB of inbuilt storage, which is further expandable via microSD card (up to 32GB).
(Also see: Micromax Canvas Pulse 4G vs. Micromax Canvas Mega 4G Q417)
It sports a 13-megapixel rear autofocus camera with LED flash, while there is a secondary 5-megapixel front-facing camera also on board. On the connectivity front, the Canvas Pulse 4G offers 3G, GPRS/ EDGE, Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n, Micro-USB, and Bluetooth options. The smartphone packs a 2100mAh battery and will be available in Black colour. It packs sensors such as accelerometer, ambient light sensor, magnetometer, and proximity sensor.
The company in a press statement confirmed that in strategic partnership with Flipkart on the Micromax Xpress smartphones this year, it sold over 500,000 units of Xpress devices in less than 5 months. Micromax also announced a partnership with Airtel to provide an introductory 4G double data offer for a period of 6 months across its entire 4G range of smartphones.
Commenting on the launch, Vineet Taneja, CEO, Micromax Informatics Ltd said, "Our latest launch, Canvas Pulse 4G is our premium yet powerful product with Flipkart offering 3GB RAM and octa-core at a never before price reiterating our commitment to democratizing technology for the new age digital natives who want to be connected all the time. Our strategic partnership with Flipkart has helped us consolidate our strong foothold in the value for money segment of the online channel and with this launch we are aiming to target the premium segment of our target audience."
Telecom minister, Ravi Shankar Prasad, said telecom companies’ alibi of
their license not mandating call drop-free coverage is not acceptable,
adding, they should either spend on improving their network or face
grave consequences.
“No one has been talking tough with the operators. We will not
appreciate their whole conduct of concentrating on data at the cost of
voice and on new customers instead of old one”, Prasad said.
Prasad stated that BSNL’s customer base is rising steadily and the
company is on the road to revival, although there is still a long way to
go. He is hopeful that MTNL will also turn around soon and pointed out
that the priority is to improve the health of MTNL and not to privatise
it.
Below is the verbatim transcript of Ravi Shankar Prasad’s interview with
Shereen Bhan on CNBC-TV18.
Q: I will get to call drops in just a bit.
A: You have begun with that, I will begin with this now. This was done
by Nitish Kumar and company in Bihar because I was attacking them very
vigorously. I am sorry even you have picked it up. However, let me tell I
am the only minister who is talking tough on all the operators. No one
has been talking very tough with them and I am very tough with them.
They have to set it right.
Earlier they only used to talk about spectrum scarcity; now all of them
are publicly owning up that they have not been able to perform up to the
mark. The international CEO of Vodafone publicly apologised in India
when he came to meet me.
What is important is they have to reinforce their network. They have to
spend where expenditure is required. I will certainly not appreciate
their whole conduct; they have only concentrated on data at the cost of
voice. They only concentrate on new customers and ignore the old ones.
I am happy now lot of towers are being erected, base transceiver station
(BTS) is being erected. About 14,000 they have done in the last
three-four months; in Delhi also about 2,100. BSNL has done 25,000 BTS
in the last one and a half years. So, it is improving; much is required
to be done.
Q: Much more is required to be done but let me ask you this in the
context of what is the recent development in this matter. The telcos
have said that there has been no consideration either on part of the
telecom regulator or on the part of the department of telecom and hence
they have been forced now to move court against the Telecom Regulatory
Authority of India (TRAI) order which penalises them for call drops
starting January 2016. How do you respond to that? I will come one by
one to the many arguments that they make in their plea but let me start
by getting your initial reaction on the fact that telcos have now moved
court against the call drop order?
A: Let us not make this interview call drop centric. Since they have
gone to court I have nothing to say but let me tell them very clearly
they have to improve. If they don’t improve alibies are not acceptable. I
am sorry to say that and let me be as blunt to Shereen Bhan as possible
they have to improve; they have to reinforce their network. Where it is
needed to spend they have to spend, alibies will not do.
Q: Let me pick up on one which you may see as an alibing, this is a part
of the plea that they have made to the court and they have basically
said that the regulator has not taken into account factors which are
beyond the control of service operators, closing down and ceiling of
cell sites, spectrum related issues including return change/swap
specifically in circles of Delhi and Mumbai.
A: I am sorry to say you don’t become a judge on their petition. That is
what you are becoming I am sorry to say that.
Q: I am asking you for a comment on their plea, that is all?
A: I publicly talked about this whole radiation issue; campaign against
towers and complain against call drop cannot go. I have got the entire
government of India agree that the government buildings will be allowed.
The postal department offices will be allowed. We have talked to New
Delhi Municipal Council (NDMC). I have written to all the chief
ministers; spectrum trading is there. Spectrum sharing is there pending
for the last 10 years. Defence bands have been identified, all the
policy initiative I have done, much more can be done but what about the
own responsibility of the operators.
I have said from day one I am the minister of development of telecom
sector I am equally the minister for the consumers of telecom. For 10
years consumers’ interest was in the background. Therefore I am saying
operators will have to reinforce their network. It is not my job to get a
location for them. If they can erect nearly 14,000 towers after I
became tough why couldn’t they do it earlier?
Let me ask you a question who has stopped them from doing it? Many of
the operators told me that we were never knowing that in Uttar Pradesh
(UP), Bihar, Bengal our network was so poor in maintenance.
Therefore they were not maintaining it well; they were not monitoring it
well. That is the point I am saying. Data growth is fine but at the
cost of data why you are sacrificing the voice. These are the issues
which they have to address.
Since you talked of Municipal Corporation of Delhi (MCD) issue, what is
the problem of MCD? They had a particular rate which was old. They
increased the rate, may be they said it was arbitrarily done. They went
to court; they could have resolved the matter by negotiation, by
arbitration. I talked to the officers of MCD therefore all these things
we have done. Let the telcos know if they don’t improve consequences
will be there.
Their right to go to the court is their’s; as I have said always I will
hate to be known as call drop minister. If it is required to be tough,
we will be tough, we will be tougher still – be very clear but they have
to improve their system –number one. Number two I have done all the
policy initiative I am willing to walk 10 steps. They will have to walk
20.
Q: Let me talk about the steps that we can possibly see moving just
beyond this issue now. Some of the recommendations or suggestions that
have come in from industry specifically on spectrum trading and sharing
for instance as far as the spectrum cap is concerned Sunil Mittal at
that Cellular Operators Association of India (COAI) press conference or
the briefing where you were also a part of has said that the cap which
is currently at 25 percent should be extended to about 50 percent odd
because of the market share that people enjoy especially in circles like
Delhi and Mumbai. Is that a consideration that you would look at?
A: My reply is very simple. My reply is there are many operators. Sunil
Mittal has a point, may be yes, may be no. Many others are opposed to
it. As a minister I would take a balanced view.
The assignment of spectrum was there which I have already liberalised
but the cap part is concerned, Telecom Regulatory Authority of India
(TRAI) has taken a view there is no need for cap. Telecom commission has
taken a view. We will see, I am not closed to it completely but my
problem is this, let me repeat it again because you are a financial
channel every interview, every question and answers becomes a kind of
almost a projection of the concerns of the operators.
Read more at: http://www.moneycontrol.com/news/business/mandatory-for-telcos-to-improve-network_4566121.html?utm_source=ref_articlev
Read more at: http://www.moneycontrol.com/news/business/mandatory-for-telcos-to-improve-network_4566121.html?utm_source=ref_articlev
Telecom minister, Ravi Shankar Prasad, said telecom companies’ alibi of
their license not mandating call drop-free coverage is not acceptable,
adding, they should either spend on improving their network or face
grave consequences.
“No one has been talking tough with the operators. We will not
appreciate their whole conduct of concentrating on data at the cost of
voice and on new customers instead of old one”, Prasad said.
Prasad stated that BSNL’s customer base is rising steadily and the
company is on the road to revival, although there is still a long way to
go. He is hopeful that MTNL will also turn around soon and pointed out
that the priority is to improve the health of MTNL and not to privatise
it.
Below is the verbatim transcript of Ravi Shankar Prasad’s interview with
Shereen Bhan on CNBC-TV18.
Q: I will get to call drops in just a bit.
A: You have begun with that, I will begin with this now. This was done
by Nitish Kumar and company in Bihar because I was attacking them very
vigorously. I am sorry even you have picked it up. However, let me tell I
am the only minister who is talking tough on all the operators. No one
has been talking very tough with them and I am very tough with them.
They have to set it right.
Earlier they only used to talk about spectrum scarcity; now all of them
are publicly owning up that they have not been able to perform up to the
mark. The international CEO of Vodafone publicly apologised in India
when he came to meet me.
What is important is they have to reinforce their network. They have to
spend where expenditure is required. I will certainly not appreciate
their whole conduct; they have only concentrated on data at the cost of
voice. They only concentrate on new customers and ignore the old ones.
I am happy now lot of towers are being erected, base transceiver station
(BTS) is being erected. About 14,000 they have done in the last
three-four months; in Delhi also about 2,100. BSNL has done 25,000 BTS
in the last one and a half years. So, it is improving; much is required
to be done.
Q: Much more is required to be done but let me ask you this in the
context of what is the recent development in this matter. The telcos
have said that there has been no consideration either on part of the
telecom regulator or on the part of the department of telecom and hence
they have been forced now to move court against the Telecom Regulatory
Authority of India (TRAI) order which penalises them for call drops
starting January 2016. How do you respond to that? I will come one by
one to the many arguments that they make in their plea but let me start
by getting your initial reaction on the fact that telcos have now moved
court against the call drop order?
A: Let us not make this interview call drop centric. Since they have
gone to court I have nothing to say but let me tell them very clearly
they have to improve. If they don’t improve alibies are not acceptable. I
am sorry to say that and let me be as blunt to Shereen Bhan as possible
they have to improve; they have to reinforce their network. Where it is
needed to spend they have to spend, alibies will not do.
Q: Let me pick up on one which you may see as an alibing, this is a part
of the plea that they have made to the court and they have basically
said that the regulator has not taken into account factors which are
beyond the control of service operators, closing down and ceiling of
cell sites, spectrum related issues including return change/swap
specifically in circles of Delhi and Mumbai.
A: I am sorry to say you don’t become a judge on their petition. That is
what you are becoming I am sorry to say that.
Q: I am asking you for a comment on their plea, that is all?
A: I publicly talked about this whole radiation issue; campaign against
towers and complain against call drop cannot go. I have got the entire
government of India agree that the government buildings will be allowed.
The postal department offices will be allowed. We have talked to New
Delhi Municipal Council (NDMC). I have written to all the chief
ministers; spectrum trading is there. Spectrum sharing is there pending
for the last 10 years. Defence bands have been identified, all the
policy initiative I have done, much more can be done but what about the
own responsibility of the operators.
I have said from day one I am the minister of development of telecom
sector I am equally the minister for the consumers of telecom. For 10
years consumers’ interest was in the background. Therefore I am saying
operators will have to reinforce their network. It is not my job to get a
location for them. If they can erect nearly 14,000 towers after I
became tough why couldn’t they do it earlier?
Let me ask you a question who has stopped them from doing it? Many of
the operators told me that we were never knowing that in Uttar Pradesh
(UP), Bihar, Bengal our network was so poor in maintenance.
Therefore they were not maintaining it well; they were not monitoring it
well. That is the point I am saying. Data growth is fine but at the
cost of data why you are sacrificing the voice. These are the issues
which they have to address.
Since you talked of Municipal Corporation of Delhi (MCD) issue, what is
the problem of MCD? They had a particular rate which was old. They
increased the rate, may be they said it was arbitrarily done. They went
to court; they could have resolved the matter by negotiation, by
arbitration. I talked to the officers of MCD therefore all these things
we have done. Let the telcos know if they don’t improve consequences
will be there.
Their right to go to the court is their’s; as I have said always I will
hate to be known as call drop minister. If it is required to be tough,
we will be tough, we will be tougher still – be very clear but they have
to improve their system –number one. Number two I have done all the
policy initiative I am willing to walk 10 steps. They will have to walk
20.
Q: Let me talk about the steps that we can possibly see moving just
beyond this issue now. Some of the recommendations or suggestions that
have come in from industry specifically on spectrum trading and sharing
for instance as far as the spectrum cap is concerned Sunil Mittal at
that Cellular Operators Association of India (COAI) press conference or
the briefing where you were also a part of has said that the cap which
is currently at 25 percent should be extended to about 50 percent odd
because of the market share that people enjoy especially in circles like
Delhi and Mumbai. Is that a consideration that you would look at?
A: My reply is very simple. My reply is there are many operators. Sunil
Mittal has a point, may be yes, may be no. Many others are opposed to
it. As a minister I would take a balanced view.
The assignment of spectrum was there which I have already liberalised
but the cap part is concerned, Telecom Regulatory Authority of India
(TRAI) has taken a view there is no need for cap. Telecom commission has
taken a view. We will see, I am not closed to it completely but my
problem is this, let me repeat it again because you are a financial
channel every interview, every question and answers becomes a kind of
almost a projection of the concerns of the operators.
Read more at: http://www.moneycontrol.com/news/business/mandatory-for-telcos-to-improve-network_4566121.html?utm_source=ref_article
Read more at: http://www.moneycontrol.com/news/business/mandatory-for-telcos-to-improve-network_4566121.html?utm_source=ref_article
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