HP Drops Price Again For Its WebOS-Based iPad Challenger 296
oxide7 writes with this selection from IBT: "Hewlett Packard reduced the price of its TouchPad tablet computer again, highlighting the uphill battle manufacturers will need to overcome as they go head-to-head against the dominant Apple iPad line of tablets. Much of a tablet's success is based on the ecosystem of apps that is available to the end-user. HP is far behind Apple or even the No.2 tablet platform, Google's Android."
Obligatory Robocop reference (Score:4, Funny)
"I'll buy that for a dollar!"
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No problem, all they have to do to compete is sell a 1+ ghz dual core equipped tablet with retina class graphics and plenty of storage and ram for $150. Easy. All it takes is bleeding off a few billion dollars. The only company I know of that does that just to crack open a new market is MicroSoft. I can't see anyone else throwing tons of money into a hole on the chance that when they start giving tablets away that Apple wont just jump to a new tablet that changes the game all over leaving them with bill
momentum (Score:4, Insightful)
There was a time many tech users and writers were excited about WebOS. I have read many reviews claiming it was possibly the best OS, compared to iOS and Android at the time.
But HP has taken an extremely long time to ship anything running WebOS. They have a tablet out, but still have not shipped a phone with competitive hardware.
They lost their momentum......
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Even worse, they've lost mindshare among developers.
Anecdotal example, but my missus saw a tablet ad last night (RIM Playbook, IIRC), and asked about getting one. I replied that we could, but it doesn't have a lot of the games and apps she wants just yet (though they probably will). Her response was pretty instructive about impulse buying: "Well, tell me which ones have them, and we'll get one of those instead."
I talked her out of it (her laptop is less than a year old, FFS...)
Re:momentum (Score:4, Interesting)
My dad recently got an ASUS TF101. The things are dirt cheep and first class Android tablets (Nvidia Tegra 2, 10" screen, latest Android, micro SD, HDMI out). All the apps are there, and the games are amazing. I'm still curious about the Touchpad, but it kind of seems pointless now.
Re:momentum (Score:4)
More time spend on a screen = less sex maybe...
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OTOH, not buying your girlfriend gifts tends to get you lots of sex.
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Then maybe we should buy gifts that doesn't consume their time? Perfume, jewelry, etc. But no tablets !
The Curse of HP (Score:3, Informative)
anything they touch turns to sand.
They could have written the book on 'How to take over a profitable business and destroy it' or 'Business Destruction for Dummies'.
I should know, having worked for them for 20+ years and seen it all happen.
Now I'm an HP Pensioner my opinion of them is that they couldn't make a decent product to save themselves.
It is a shame really. Once upon a time the was a lot of really good talent there but the Dilbert PHB says everything you need to know about HP management,
Carly was kno
What good is a phone if you can't speak? (Score:3)
Until there is a robust application ecosystem for the tablet, it will remain niche. Who cares if you save $100, but you can't do anything fun with it? Hundreds of apps - even if they're all good - means very little competition on pricing and features, and lots of black market segments (insert fart app joke here). It the reason I skipped the android tablets this past spring - a dearth of full screen apps.
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Re:What good is a phone if you can't speak? (Score:4, Interesting)
It depends on what you do. I'll admit I got my iPad (v1, after the 2 came out so I could save ~$300) because I knew it had certain apps in the store that would be good (I have an iPhone, which won out over the Nexus 1 about 20 months ago).
There are some apps that work regardless - web surfing, netflix, local streaming, email, text input. Then there are productivity apps, like the software for the remote storage service (aka cloud) I use, PDF reading and annotation, calendaring/journaling, structural steel design and property apps (I'm a struct engr) etc. And, of course, stuff that's just fun - like a good piano app, games that my 9 yo likes, flipboard, and a host of others.
I actually use it for a pretty wide variety of tasks. It's the cheapest way (at $15/mo) to get cellular data so I can pull up calculations, cut sheets, specs, and drawings from my office server when I'm in the field or in a project meeting. I can also store and synchronize my entire sheet music library for my chorus, quartet, and special event groups on it so I can review/practice music wherever I am. When my daughter went on a vacation this summer with my wife and in-laws, we loaded up a couple of books and about 2 dozen movies for the trip. She watched about 4-5 movies and read something close to 1000 pages, while my wife got directions and planned side trips on it, all in a form factor that fit easily into her mini-backpack.
Mine is actually quite useful, and I prefer the form factor for reading, sharing, and consuming information. It sucks rocks at creating, and I still have a small notebook for when I'm going to go somewhere and have to do work (reports, drawings). It fills a niche, and does it very well - but it would be useless, or at least cumbersome, without a wide variety of purpose-built software.
Finally, a cluestick (Score:3)
Folks, if you want to beat iXYZ (of which I'm not a fanboi):
1. You have to have better hardware
2. A lower price
3. Or both (best)
Otherwise, why would anyone move to your platform?
That said, WebOS [precentral.net] is an awesome open-sourceish platform. It looks great too, and it's easy to make apps.
I hope it gains traction to preserve some sanity in the marketplace and prevent a total Steve Jobs monopoly.
I see it as a partner, and not enemy of Android in this endeavor.
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Some Android tablets already have both. Seems like some items are missing on that list.
Re:Finally, a cluestick (Score:4, Insightful)
Care to give some examples? And when you say 'better hardware', remember that physical dimensions are one of the most important aspects of the hardware to a typical user, while CPU power is significantly less important. So, your mission (should you choose to accept it) name one Android tablet that:
Last time I checked, there were no Android tablets that even met the first requirement, and the ones that matched the second two failed the third. I don't really see the point of this kind of device, so I've not looked very closely, but I have read comments from Samsung about how difficult it was to compete with Apple because they could get the components significantly cheaper due to their large volumes (purchasing volumes, that is, not the girth of their users).
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How many people really care about how thin their tablets are? I know that I don't, and I'm an iPad owner. It's not like we're going to be sticking these things in our pockets and that extra 2 mm of case depth is going to put a crease in our pants pockets.
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Re:Finally, a cluestick (Score:4, Insightful)
After years of having "internet" buttons and the like on my cell phone, which was just code for "charge me a lot of money for something that does't really work when I hit it accidentally" I am a fan of Apple's approach. In fact I'm mystified by Android approach to put a mess of buttons for specific functionality right there on the front of the device. It seems like a throwback to a less happy time to me.
Re:Finally, a cluestick (Score:4, Insightful)
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My mum techie mum just ditched her iMac for an iPad. I'd say she cares about thinness. Last night a friend of mine got an iPad for her birthday, she loves how thin it is! Two examples though anecdotal.
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Anyone who grew up on computers with 64k of memory or less that doesn't marvel at the sheer engineering that goes into an iPad has no soul. The thing still blows my mind everyday.
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How many people plan on carrying their tablet around in a bag with something else?
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"How many people really care about how thin their tablets are?"
Anecdote time. When I got my first notebook I thought "Cool, I can take this with me anywhere!" before I tried taking it everywhere. It didn't take too long before it just sat on my desk with the occasional weekend trip.
Then each successive notebook got smaller and lighter and a repeat performance of the above happened. Even including my 2006 MBP, the thinnest and lightest notebook I've had. (Yes, I have a netbook. It was cool for a bit and then
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So, people are going to buy a tablet that's 8.7mm deep, but when somebody sees an 8.9mm deep table, it's suddenly not buyable? I've got a Nook which is 13.1mm deep and it's hardly a ridiculously huge device. A large part of why it's that deep is because it has a user replaceable battery and microSD slot.
I realize that there's a lot of Apple cultists that believe that smaller is better and that you can't get too small, but at some point reality has to overpower the famous Steve Jobs distortion field.
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The desire for thinner tablets is a Steve Jobs creation...?
When we're talking about Reality Distortion, we are talking about Apple fans, right? Every day we go without tragic Apple news it gets harder and harder to tell.
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The desire for thinner tablets is a Steve Jobs creation...?
So THAT'S why he's lost so much weight!!
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The Acer Iconia A500 is too fat (13.3mm) and weighs more than an iPad, but otherwise:
1280x800 display
10 hour battery life
$399.99 at Staples
It also has:
hdmi 1080p / Dolby Mobile output
full-size USB so you can hook up standard keyboards, hard drives, etc.
microSD card slot
wifi, bluetooth, dual core, cameras, etc, etc.
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At 13.3mm, it's 50% thicker than the iPad, and I also question your price slightly - from Acer's web site it's £427, which is about $700, and that's with £100 off the RRP, so the price you quote is half the price Acer quotes, and a lot more than the iPad. Staples' web site refuses to give me a price without entering a US Zip code, so I can't tell if it's really that price.
So, 50% thicker, and the UK price is over 50% more than the iPad, although the display does seem nicer. If I had a use for
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Dimensions: 256.6 x 172.9 x 8.6 mm
Size: 800 x 1280 pixels, 10.1 inches
Battery: around 10 hours [engadget.com]
Price: $499
So for the same price, and the expectation that the software catalog is going to expand, you get a better hardware, with an OS designed from the ground up for tablets, with tablet-only semantics. Personally, as a dev, I can't wait to get my hand in one of these.
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Android's strength is also its biggest weakness (Score:2)
The diversity of the android market is a strong point. The fragmentation is also its biggest weakness.
Given that Android can match the Apple Platform in terms of Hardware and are pretty well on a par with the software why do Android makers act the way they do?
What do I mean?
Well
- The lack of updates. How many posts do you see where people complain that maker xxx won't upgrade their device.
Look at Apple's history with IOS. They don't abandon a device until it has been replaced
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So, walled garden good, consumer freedom bad?
What Apply fanbois tend to forget is that you shouldn't have to jail break your devices in order to install what you want. Unfortunately the consequence of that is that you have to be mindful of what you install.
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So, walled garden good, consumer freedom bad?
What Apply fanbois tend to forget is that you shouldn't have to jail break your devices in order to install what you want. Unfortunately the consequence of that is that you have to be mindful of what you install.
And what Android/HP/etc fanbois tend to forget is that the vast majority of tablet customers don't even know what jailbreak means, let alone want to do it.
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You really supported his point with that last line.
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Are we talking marketshare over here or our own preferences? Because all that you cite is well and good, but grandma doesn't give a shit.
Consumer freedom is still there, and you can return your product, sell it used, buy another one. Heck, you can even not buy it.
Are you going to say that most alarm clocks are bad because your OpenAlarmClock is the same but you can compile your kernel on it? Who gives a flying fuck about that? I buy an alarm clock to get woken up in the morning, not to compile linux on it.
I
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quality control
Let's see, all aluminum chassis check, wide viewing angles check, high quality Honeycomb 3.2 check. Yes, there are niggles here and there but there are issues on iPad too.
developers exploiting users
Full disclosure of app permissions requests check. Official app store that weeds out problems as they are exposed check.
consistency
App navigation/menu button always in the same place check. Settings in the application always accessible from the same button check.
As an owner of both a Xoom and an iPad, your arguments
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Quality control....
I think he means this sort of thing [arstechnica.com]. Yes, you can get a quality Android device (although I seem to recall Xoom's getting panned for being glitchy) but you don't necessarily GET a quality Android device.
Yes, freedom of choice and all that. Wonderful thing. But at least some of us are talking about how the iPad is the tablet for that enormous (and apparently profitable) swath of Appliance People that wander blankly through malls and upscale stores through this great country of ours.
Of co
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While I agree there are Android tablets that have better hardware, and others that have lower price, but I haven't seen any that have both.
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1) Brand recognition and reputation (Marketing)
2) Application availability
3) perceived ease of use
4) Black turtlenecks
5) Price, except when they can finance it over 2 years through a cellphone carrier.
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>Geeks care about better hardware,
Alright, I'll give you that normal people don't care about abstract numbers.
But I think they'll care that if Android device is flaky or slow due to a slow CPU or low memory.
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"Geeks care about better hardware"
Actually, I'd say they care more about better bullet points.
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Apple have pretty much never had superior hardware when it comes to iPods, iPhones, and the iPad. No expandable storage being one of the main issues I have with them. What set these Apple devices apart was the improved interfaces (which yes for the iPhone/iPad involved hardware, but now everyone has capacitive touch).
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now everyone has capacitive touch
Everyone???? Uhhhh, no.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_Android_devices#Tablet_computers [wikipedia.org]
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I was exaggerating - I know there are still cheap resistive devices out there - but anyone who cares can get a capacitive phone or tablet at a very reasonable price, as long as they don't want the official Google branded app/Market. One of my co workers recently got a 10" advent tablet with capacitive touch and Android 2.2 for £190. Sure it isn't at the bleeding edge, but it does all that most people need, for less than half the price of an iPad. The only reason I went for an Android 3.x tablet was fo
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(The Advent tablet has a dual core nVidia Tegra 2 processor for those that think it may be under powered.. I can't wait to see what will be available in a year :)
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Expandable storage is a workaround for a product flaw. It's not a desirable feature. "Sorry, we couldn't make an affordable product with a reasonable amount of on-board storage. Why don't you fiddle around with these tiny little pieces of plastic instead."
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1. You have to have better hardware
This is a recurring theme on /. and misses the point. Better hardware is irrelevant if all it can do is warm the lap of the target consumer. I doubt a large percentage of iPad owners fixate on / can tell you what's under the hood.
HP technical support issues too (Score:2)
OK some of hp greps linux [printers and enterprise], but at a 'consumer level' its all windows.
I use a lot of linux, but at a consumer level who buys hp computers for technical support. Can consumer support at hp do linux and windows ?
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That happens fairly often actually. The problem is that Apple has a really amazing marketing department. Which is why most folks bought iPods even though they were inferior on all three of those points to something at pretty much every point in their development.
But, they became a status symbol and after that folks were willing to pay too much for too little. I mean for god's sake for the longest time you couldn't even replace your own battery even though the battery life was terrible.
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You might be right initially about the marketing (any product in general), but the iPod is ten years old now, I'd say its standing on its own merits technically and on a ease of use basis.
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right. software catalog, os features,, advertising, distribution, buzz, design... don't count at all !
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"better hardware" is so vague it's useless: it could mean more powerful, cuter, more robust... or whatever, depending on what one's hardware tastes are.
Just how bad is the battery life? (Score:2)
lukewarm reviews criticizing the ... poor battery live
Just how bad is it? Merely journalistic hyperbole where it runs about 5 minutes less than a ipad, or is it so bad you can't watch a full length movie on one charge?
Much of a tablet's success is based on the ecosystem of apps that is available to the end-user.
B.S. journalist doesn't know anything, just repeating what other journalists say. Every user I know spends 99.99% of their time in safari, mail, facebook app, or the video/music player. With an honorable mention of the kindle app.
No one buys based on which platform has the most fart soundboard apps or the most "20 pictures of attractive women
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B.S. journalist doesn't know anything, just repeating what other journalists say. Every user I know spends 99.99% of their time in safari, mail, facebook app, or the video/music player. With an honorable mention of the kindle app.
Yay!!! Somebody finally gets it. You've succinctly explained Apple's success. See, it's not the shiny hardware; it's the nice stuff that comes preinstalled, no mucking about, that people are buying. Surprisingly enough, fewer iOS users are shallow hipsters with too much money than the average slashdotter is willing to admit.
This is why many Apple fans don't mind the supposed lock-in, because what they are locked into works 99.99% of the time for them. Of course the App Store is just icing for those folks. I
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What app are these non-"boring" people using?
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Angry Birds
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So to be non-boring, you must do what everyone else does? I see.
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Grindr.
Death knell of WebOS. (Score:3)
Which is a damn shame, because WebOS is such a damn good mobile OS.
I'm not sure if it's this price drop or the fact that it showed up on Woot for 20 bucks off a few days ago that really is the final bell for WebOS.
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It is. I've been waiting to buy one.
Personally, I really like the API they're using for WebOS.
The whole thing is a Javascript toolkit, and it makes a lot of sense. Developing apps for it will be a piece of cake.
You have the best Slashdot cig ever, by the way.
Shoe is on another foot now? (Score:3)
"Much of a tablet's success is based on the ecosystem of apps that is available to the end-user."
It seems like the summary author needs to be reminded that this was precisely Apple's dilemma for decades, and to a degree still is with its desktop OS versus Windows.
Personally I'm inclined to resist any browser-as-OS solution with every fiber of my being, just as I have been software subscriptions. The writing is on the wall: the browser-as-OS gambit is intended to warm people up to the notion of software in the "cloud", and software in the cloud will inevitably lead to subscriptions. Once the instructions no longer even execute on your hardware, you're a hostage.
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You have a point in general - the "trend" amongst the more scheming and greedy software (and many other) companies is definitely towards attempting to exact rent and ultimately to recreate the ole landed gentry/peasants dynamics.
But on the
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WebKit hook your clients up please (Score:2)
If WebKit would support textArea (SVG Tiny 1.2) [w3.org] the applications I write would work on any device using it. eg. They would scale to any screen size. As a result they would have more applications to list.
Software lock-in (Score:2)
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If software titles were platform independent then people wouldn't get locked in to a certain platform, and wouldn't care about buying what their friends have in order to have apps/games that talk to each other nicely. More people probably would be buying HP (or other) tablets if it weren't for this.
Apple still supports HTML5/Javascript apps and developers can make cross platform apps using this technology. Some do, but most don't see value in cross platform and are focused on developing something quickly.
Funny, because Apple originally wanted only web-clips and not native apps...
Apple originally championed HTML5/javascript as the only native development platform, but developers wanted a more full featured dev environment and toolset so Apple adapted their existing Xcode.
Of course then devices probably could not run any apps locally.
Why not? Apple has a very nice standard HTML and javascript engine on the phone and you don't need an exter
The obvious reason (Score:5, Insightful)
Even this Slashdot thread quickly diverges into talking about the iPad. HP and the others struggle because not only fans of the iPad are constantly talking about it, but "enemies" of it, too. So the iPad becomes the de facto tablet.
Re:Tablets are massively overpriced (Score:4, Informative)
You can buy a $99 tablet at Walgreens. Of course, it's a piece of shit compared to the iPad, but if you really want a cheap tablet, they are available.
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There's also an assortment of them down to maybe $79 now on DealExtreme, free shipping on a slow boat from China. Actually, it comes by air, but you couldn't tell by how long it takes to show up. Some of them are actually quite credible, DX has relatively uncensored fora so it's relatively easy to find which ones they are.
That reminds me, I need to see about reporting some defective Foakleys.
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You can buy a $99 tablet at Walgreens. Of course, it's a piece of shit compared to the iPad, but if you really want a cheap tablet, they are available.
It's a piece of shit compared to the iPad, quality Android tablets, HP's WebOS tablet and RIM's Playbook. It's even crap when compared to other low-end craptastic tablets (either 'dime store' Android offerings hacked together from second rate parts and companies, or other Android wanna-be's). At some point the value to the consumer will become the yardstick upon which purchases are based. The real question is will other players (besides iOS & Android) survive the lack of apps and features in their curre
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Agreed. Although I think it's fair to point out that everything could magically change tomorrow. It wasn't long ago that Apple wouldn't even try to play in this space because of the massive failure that was the Newton.
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>You can buy a $99 tablet at Walgreens. Of course, it's a piece of shit compared to the iPad..
Well yes, $99 is pushing the envelope a little. But seriously, why can't hardware on par with an iPad or more important a Xoom be sold for $199-$250? For $250 you can buy a new, not discontinued, netbook. It has a 10" display, an expensive, battery sucking Intel CPU, a Windows license and a more complex housing including a pointer and keyboard. Compare to a tablet that replaces the Intel Inside with what is
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A product is priced based on what people are willing to pay. The fact that the iDrones are buying iPads at lower costs than usually inferior products, I guess they aren't as mindless as you suggest.
Re:Tablets are massively overpriced (Score:4, Insightful)
"Bring the price down to less than $200."
Computer businesses want to preserve margin. That's why they don't keep producing older models and dropping the price. Anyone not liking that can buy a used machine instead.
Re:Tablets are massively overpriced (Score:4, Insightful)
Apple fans have too much money, huh? That must explain why many of the iPad competitors actually cost more?
The fact you are, 1) calling the iPad a "tablet", and b) comparing its hardware specs to a netbook, tells me you don't get what makes the iPad the dominant device in its segment.
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you don't get what makes the iPad the dominant device in its segment.
Marketing?
What is it if not a tablet?
(posted from my Xoom :)
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you don't get what makes the iPad the dominant device in its segment.
Marketing?
No, delivering a product people want. Marketing tells people about your product, but you can't keep something as popular as the iPad (and the iPhone and the iPod) popular for as long as it has been primarily on marketing.
That's what you guys have been saying about the iPod for a decade now. When the truth is much simpler: most people don't like what you like.
What is it if not a tablet?
Not a netbook, which was his point.
(posted from my Xoom :)
Funny, I recall a rather strong marketing campaign for the Xoom. As I understand it, Motorola has sold many thousand
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the ipad is not a tablet, it's a rectangular slab of magic !
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When is Shashdot going to get a "like" button?!
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It's somewhat reasonable to consider tablets specs to netbook specs, in that they're often used for similar tasks. Not a lot of heavy lifting going on with either.
And there are lots of reasons why the iPads are hugely dominant. They're good products and all, but not least of which is a great track record with their previous (and somewhat similar) devices. Virtually no one who owned an iphone 4 is afraid to own an ipad t
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This is informative? A post laden with Apple stereotypes and a comparison of hardware without taking into account software and Q&A testing? Also a comparison between a charity to a business? There's a reason why the iPad costs more, the hardware and software is top notch over anything else.
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OK, I'll throw in a software comparison for you: Windows: $$, Android: free.
Also, I suppose netbooks are sold without any Q&A, so you might have a point there: A device with no moving parts and much fewer buttons and internal connectors is certainly going to have a higher Q&A cost.
If you think that everything above $200 is not margin, YOU are part of the reason why these things still cost too much.
Spend any time at all comparing apps on Apple versus Android apps and you'll understand his comment about software Q&A. Apple apps get Q&A before published, stick to a gui convention, and almost always work. Android apps on the other hand are generally of a lower quality. Read the Android market reviews on a dozen apps and at least half will have lots of users complaining about force-closes, poor screen layout, cpu hogging, etc. The only reason I own an Android tablet is because I don't mind deb
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> Apple can get away with a huge margin because they're the market leader and quite frankly, Apple fans have too much money.
There is more to the computer then just hardware and software young grasshopper. There is the User Experience, ergo, a consistent and well-designed UI for a touch device, or I should say, lack of them, is what makes all the other touch devices look like toys compared to the iPad. You are paying for Apple's brand because you are paying for (relatively) good UI design.
Repeat after m
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There is more to the computer then just hardware and software young grasshopper. There is the User Experience, ergo, a consistent and well-designed UI for a touch device, or I should say, lack of them, is what makes all the other touch devices look like toys compared to the iPad.
Take a look at WebOS and the QNX OS on the PlayBook -- both are vastly superior in terms to the iPad in both the UI and the nebulous "User Experience".
They make the iPad look like a clunky antique. Hell, they STILL haven't managed a notification system that's even comes close to what a 10-year-old blackberry!
Maybe someday Apple will catch up to the competition, but I'm not holding my breath. They seem to be doing quite well selling the myth that their product is easiest to use and had the best "user experi
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The only 3rd party app I would really miss having on my Droid is Kindle.
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The only 3rd party app I would really miss having on my Droid is Kindle.
It's planned. http://www.slashgear.com/amazon-kindle-for-webos-touchpad-confirmed-09132141/ [slashgear.com]
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so why are so many iPads syncing to Windows machines?
I like the fact that browsing and doing stuff doesn't have to be constrained either by small screen size or having to gently handle a laptop.
I can flip open my iPad's smart cover and be ready to browse. Can't do that on a cheap ass netbook or laptop.
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With the iPhone they had an innovative product, one worth copying, but people who buy iPads do so because they're Apple's new thing...
It's an attractive thought, afterall it's fashionable to think that Apple has some unearthly power to summon money out of the masses, but that's not what's happening. Lots of people have iPhones and iPods. The vast majority of those people love surfing from the couch and purchasing interesting/fun apps. A number of people I've personally encountered told me that they wished they had a bigger version of the iPod Touch. Now that's anecdotal, I'll concede that, but they basically described the iPad. When
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So, 30 million people though that they needed Apple's new thing?
Or maybe 30 million people thought it was better than any laptop out there, for their needs, for the same price?
Or maybe you're just plain wrong.
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Ooh I love it when someone brings an old piece of flamebait up to date :-)
Even including the details of inconsistent spelling. Genius!