
Vivo V60 India launch confirmed: Check expected specs, features, price, camera, other details
Vivo V60 India launch date: Vivo India has confirmed the upcoming launch of the Vivo V60 smartphone in India, potentially on August 12, with an expected price range of ₹37,000 to ₹40,000. The V60, succeeding the V50, has been spotted on certification websites, hinting at an imminent release.
Vivo V60 Vivo V60 India launch date: Vivo India has confirmed that the Vivo V60 smartphone will launch in India soon. Although the company has not announced an official date, a recent leak suggests that the phone may be unveiled on August 12. The device is expected to be priced between ₹37,000 and ₹40,000 and could be available in Auspicious Gold, Mist Grey, and Moonlit Blue colours.Vivo announced on social media platform X that it will soon introduce the Vivo V60 in the Indian market. The company has not yet shared specific details about the launch event or sales availability. The V60 will succeed the Vivo V50, which was launched in February this year.
— Vivo_India (@Vivo_India)
According to a report by The Tech Outlook, the Vivo V60 is likely to launch in India with a price tag ranging from ₹37,000 to ₹40,000. The report also claims that the phone will come in three colour variants—Auspicious Gold, Mist Grey, and Moonlit Blue.The Vivo V60, bearing the model number V2511, has appeared on several certification platforms, including TRDA, SIRIM, Geekbench, and TUV. These listings suggest that the smartphone is nearing its official launch.The report adds that the Vivo V60 is expected to run on the Snapdragon 7 Gen 4 chipset and may come with a 6,500mAh battery. The phone is likely to support 90W fast charging and could ship with FuntouchOS based on Android 16.
The handset is also tipped to carry an IP68+IP69 rating for dust and water resistance. Other expected features include dual stereo speakers, an in-display fingerprint sensor, and a flat 6.67-inch 1.5K AMOLED display with a 120Hz refresh rate and peak brightness of up to 1,300 nits.The Vivo V60 is said to feature a triple rear camera setup with Zeiss optics. It may include a 50-megapixel main camera, an 8-megapixel ultrawide lens, and a 50-megapixel periscope telephoto sensor with 3x optical zoom. On the front, the phone is tipped to have a 50-megapixel selfie camera, similar to its predecessor.As Vivo prepares for the V60 launch in India, more details are expected to be revealed in the coming days. With upgrades in battery, camera, and display, the smartphone could be a notable mid-range option in the Indian market.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
&w=3840&q=100)

Business Standard
2 hours ago
- Business Standard
US tariff to hit Indian electronics sector; IT exports may feel ripple
United States President Donald Trump's decision to impose a 25 per cent tariff on India is likely to create short-term challenges for the electronics manufacturing sector in India, as well as have an indirect impact on the country's information technology and services exports, experts said. The imposition of these tariffs also underscores the need for India to deepen its competitiveness in the global electronics manufacturing supply chain through lower input tariffs, stronger trade access, and accelerated infrastructure execution, the experts said. 'It also underlines the urgency for India's electronics sector to diversify export markets, deepen domestic markets, develop Indian brands and products, and move up the value chain to reduce dependency on price-sensitive, tariff-exposed exports,' said Ashok Chandak, head, India Electronics and Semiconductor Association and SEMI India. The imposition of tariffs from August 1 also offers a silver lining by giving the country a chance to 'reduce exposure to risks and emerge as a dependable, cost-effective alternative in the global manufacturing landscape,' said Kunal Chaudhary, tax partner, EY India. 'The upcoming trade negotiations with the US offer a path to restore balance, and if handled strategically, can even enhance India's appeal as a long-term investment destination,' Chaudhary said. The Indian IT services export sector, though not directly impacted by the 25 per cent tariffs, may face a substantial ripple effect, said Nitin Bhatt, technology sector leader, EY. 'Rising input costs may prompt US companies to scale back discretionary tech spending. Simultaneously, growing unease around workforce mobility and evolving digital taxation frameworks could redefine how cross-border services are priced and delivered,' Bhatt said. Companies in the IT sector will need to pivot to hybrid delivery models and embed artificial intelligence (AI) at scale to weather demand volatility and negotiate an increasingly fragmented and uncertain global landscape, he added.


Time of India
3 hours ago
- Time of India
Electronics exports from India likely safe from US tariff hike—for now
Indian exporters of electronics products, such as smartphones, laptops, servers, tablets etc, are unlikely to be affected immediately by the latest US duties. The products fall under the Section 232 tariffs that are going to come up for review in the coming weeks, officials aware of the details told ET. As of now, electronics exporters don't pay any duties for sending shipments to the US. "Until the 232 tariffs are announced, there won't be any impact on exports of smartphones like that of Apple, Samsung, Motorola etc to the US," said a person privy to the details. Explore courses from Top Institutes in Please select course: Select a Course Category MCA CXO Data Science Management Healthcare Product Management healthcare Cybersecurity Leadership Data Science Finance Artificial Intelligence Operations Management Technology Degree Project Management others Data Analytics MBA Others Digital Marketing PGDM Public Policy Design Thinking Skills you'll gain: Programming Proficiency Data Handling & Analysis Cybersecurity Awareness & Skills Artificial Intelligence & Machine Learning Duration: 24 Months Vellore Institute of Technology VIT Master of Computer Applications Starts on Aug 14, 2024 Get Details For the time being, such exports will continue to stay at zero import duty.

Business Standard
3 hours ago
- Business Standard
Google to invest $6 billion in 1-GW data centre project in Andhra Pradesh
Google will invest $6 billion to develop a 1-gigawatt data centre and its power infrastructure in the southern Indian state of Andhra Pradesh in the Alphabet unit's first such investment in India, government sources said on Wednesday. Due to be built in the port city of Visakhapatnam, the data centre investment includes $2 billion in renewable energy capacity that will be used to power the facility, two Andhra Pradesh government sources with direct knowledge of the matter told Reuters. The search giant's data centre will be the largest in capacity and investment size in Asia and is part a multi-billion-dollar expansion of its data centre portfolio across the region in countries including Singapore, Malaysia and Thailand. In April, Alphabet said it was still committed to spending some $75 billion this year to build data centre capacity despite the economic uncertainty resulting from U.S. President Donald Trump's global tariff offensive. Alphabet did not immediately respond to Reuters' request for comment. Andhra Pradesh's information technology minister Nara Lokesh, who is in Singapore to discuss investments with thegovernment and business leaders there, did not comment on the Google investment. "We've made certain announcements like Sify, which are public," he said, referring to a 550-MW data centre Sify Technologies plans to build in the state. "There are certain announcements which are not yet public. In October, we will make those announcements." Andhra Pradesh, a state run by a leading ally of India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi, was split into two in 2014, losing its former capital Hyderabad and a major revenue source to the newly created Telangana state. Andhra Pradesh has since been looking to attract investments to ease the financial strains of high debt and social spending. Lokesh said Andhra Pradesh has already been able to finalise investments in data centres with total capacity of 1.6 GW, adding that it aims to build 6 GW of data centres over the next five years from nearly zero currently. He expects the initial 1.6 GW of already agreed data centres to be operational in the next 24 months. That would be more than the 1.4 GW currently in operation in the entire country, according to real estate consultancy Anarock. "We're also working on getting three cable landing stations in Visakhapatnam. We want to create enough of cable network, which will be two times what Mumbai has today," Lokesh said. Cable landing stations - typically located close to data centres requiring fast and reliable connections to global networks - are used to store equipment which receives and relays data from undersea cables. Lokesh also said the state was looking to build up energy infrastructure to meet sustainability requirements of data centres. He said he anticipated power generation capacity requirements of as much as 10 GW from the electricity-intensive industry over the next five years. "Majority will end up being actually green energy, and that's the unique value proposition that we bring to the table," he said. Some of the additional capacity will be coal-fired, however, as data centres require reliable, high volume power throughout the day, he added.