Khaleej Times

India’s Hike unveils phones that work without active data

- Saritha Rai

bangalore — WhatsApp rival Hike of India is introducin­g a version of Android that lets users message, make payments and access informatio­n without an active data connection, seeking to offer services to people who aren’t yet able to access the Internet.

The modified mobile software, called Total, will be available on four devices starting March, Hike said in a statement on Wednesday. People will be able to message, access news, purchase bus tickets, get cricket scores, pay bills and recharge data allowances through a single login. Total uses technology that communicat­es with networks in a different way than standard wireless networks. Access can be purchased in onerupee (2-cent) increments.

Hike, backed by SoftBank Group Corp and Tencent Holdings Ltd, is betting that it can connect more of India’s one-billion plus citizens to mobile services by offering much cheaper ways of access wireless networks. Almost 736 million Indians don’t have mobile network connection­s, Hike said. The company has more than 100 million users and was valued at $1.4 billion in its latest fundraisin­g.

“India has 400 million smartphone users but barely half of

400M smartphone users in India, but barely half of them are active Internet users

them are active Internet users, and we want to close the gap for the bottom of pyramid users by helping them come online to a very, very simple internet,” Kavin Bharti Mittal, founder and chief executive officer of Hike, said in an interview. “We are doing something radical to make the internet less daunting and complicate­d for these users.”

Mittal is the son of the billionair­e Sunil Bharti Mittal, chairman of India’s largest telecommun­ication carrier, Bharti Airtel Ltd.

Hike is teaming up with Indian phonemaker­s Intex Technologi­es India Ltd and Karbonn Mobiles to introduce the new smartphone models, which will cost ₹3,500 to ₹5,000. Users can switch on the new device, log in via a phone number and start using services immediatel­y, Hike said.

The devices are based on a technology called USSD protocol that encrypts, compresses and transmits data. — Bloomberg

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