Lenovo K3 Note, one of the most popular budget phablets --a hybrid smartphone-tablet -- is available for only $153, with global shipping.
India's consumers are showing a voracious appetite for smartphones in the $100 - $125 range, and are probably changing handsets more frequently.
India's smartphone vendors are attempting to come up with models to compete with Chinese imports, but the going is tough for smaller players.
2015 is turning out to be the year that Chinese smartphone makers are accelerating their plans to outdo each other in the Indian market.
Google is finally launching its next Android One phone in India, albeit in a pricier range, where the smartphone will have to compete with Xiaomi Mi 4i.
India and China will account for almost 40 percent of all smartphones sold in the world by 2017, according to a new research report.
India's efforts to connect its remotest villages through mobile phones and broadband Internet is under way.
Phablet lovers in India will be scrambling to pre-order the Lenovo K3 Note, which goes on sale in India next month for less than $160.
Lenovo Vibe Shot is now on sale with Amazon for $380 Unlocked.
The next Motorola Moto G reportedly brings an improved Qualcomm Snapdragon processor and a rear camera bumped up to 13 megapixels.
Growing demand in India is helping Chinese companies ship more smartphones in the subcontinent as their home market begins to cool.
Indian smartphone vendor Micromax released an ultra-slim phone on Thursday, but at its price, that may not be enough.
The unlocked Moto X (2014) is available with Moto Maker customization at an off-contract price of $299.99
Xiaomi is struggling to sustain momentum in India, where demand outstrips supply of its phones.
Xiaomi's supply woes continue as the Chinese smartphone maker is only able to ship small batches to its second-largest market, India.
After its fallout with Cyanogen, OnePlus is set on improving its own OxygenOS that will ship with its next smartphone, the OnePlus 2.
Users of Motorola Mobility's Moto X phones may have reason to cheer as the company said it is closer to a full roll-out of the Android Lollipop 5.1 upgrade.
Affordable smartphones are changing lives in India, helping people get jobs, allowing entrepreneurs to reach customers and creating new first-time users.
The new line comes as more companies seek a solution to flawed password technology.
Sales of Apple's iPhones were up 72.5 percent, pushing the company past Xiaomi in the People's Republic.
Chinese vendors like Xiaomi and Lenovo are targeting the subcontinent with slick, low-cost handsets.
Large Chinese companies like Alibaba are increasingly looking at India as an important step in their global expansion plans and stepping up investments there.