HP Drops Price Again For Its WebOS-Based iPad Challenger
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."
"I'll buy that for a dollar!"
There's no -1 for "I don't get it."
Are there even third party apps for this tablet? Selling it as a email/web/video playbook device doesn't do it much good if there's no third-party functionality available.
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......
Apple can get away with a huge margin because they're the market leader and quite frankly, Apple fans have too much money. More rational customers don't see why a tablet should cost more than a netbook, which has a more expensive and more powerful processor, more RAM, a hard disk and is comparably small. When a UK based charity can throw together a $25 ARM computer, why does slapping on a touchscreen and a battery make a tablet 20 times as expensive? It simply shouldn't. Bring the price down to less than $200.
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.
Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
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 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.
I'm not a lawyer, but I play one on the Internet. Blog
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 for 99 cents" apps.
"Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
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.
Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
"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.
This is a little inflammatory, but I think Apple's dominance in tablets can be attributed to the fact that tablets have no real function. 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, not because they really need a laptop/cellphone hybrid that can't do as much as either one. So people who aren't Apple people, the market for non-Apple tablets, have no compelling reason to purchase one of these.
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 ?
For a Windows based piece of hardware, I expect to pay less than Apple just because they are not Apple.
Apple is a premium brand.
Windows is the value brand.
Therefore, comparing an iPad with certain hardware requirements with a Windows based one, I wouldn't even consider the Windows based one unless it's at least 25% less: A Windows equivalent of the base iPad would have to go for $400.00 - max. That's my expectation in the computing World and if HP or any other Windows hardware maker can't meet those price expectations, then I'll buy Apple.
The number of typographical and grammatical errors in the article itself lead me to question its integrity
Before the iPad was officially announced, there was speculation it would start at $1000. And people were ready to buy it at that price point. The fact you can get them now for less than half of that is amazing.
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 known as the 'Wicked Witch from Elbonia' in my former group (which she disbanded despite increasing business by 25% year on year).
I'd give a shit if they hadn't screwed me out of my Sprint Pre's WebOS 2.0 update.
Buying Borders would give HP about 400 stores in US overnight. Remove the stationery, most CDs and DVDs, keep the books. Divide into thirds: 1. HP tablets, phones, computers, printers, Kobo e-reader, show how WebOS connects them; 2. Coffee bar, event space with huge internet TVs, sponsor book clubs and author interviews; 3. Books, magazines, top CDs and DVD/blurays. HP will need to demo directly to customers why WebOS is great. HP should either get serious or just give up.
If WebKit would support textArea (SVG Tiny 1.2) 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.
Having to work for a living is the root of all evil.
HP released a TabletPC running Windows 7 back in October. It's called HP Slate 500. It was initially priced at $800. Today, almost one year later, the device is still sold at $800. And there has never been a promotion involving rebates or coupons. The price has consistently stayed at $800 since October 2010.
Compared to the iPad:
- thicker
- heavier
- more expensive
Yet, HP has never dropped its price....
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. Funny, because Apple originally wanted only web-clips and not native apps, it's the users and developers that were screaming for that. It's like they walked right into a cage and demanded for a padlock. Of course then devices probably could not run any apps locally.
Twinstiq, game news
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 by at least two models. Android makers? Well many Android devices are using software that is frankly obsolete by the time you buy the device and the maker has already moved onto another release of Android and left your newly purchased device in the dust for dead.
This IMHO is not sustainable
You might argue that people can root their device and install an unsupported version of android.
Well, aside from the fact that MOST people are not geeks and would even consider such a move, by doing so that have plainly thrown any warranty validity right out the window.
If you treat a tablet as an Appliance much like your Washing Machine do you purposley go out to invalidate the warranty? I'd be willing to wager that 90% of consumers wouldn't. Again the Apple business model wins. You buy one in the full knowlege that the IOS updates will come out and you can install them at will.
The Android market needs to get its act in order. This direction can only come from Google.
Sadly this direction seems to be totally absent because they want to keep the market diverse.
See, Strength & Weakness in the same breath.
I'd rather be riding my '63 Triumph T120.
Apple, for good or bad, knows how to build up anticipation to the masses of somewhat "drones", to stand in line to get their products. They are, in my opinion, pretty good at the device, but personally, I can't see paying for their devices, when I don't use mp3 or video that much. Unless HP, or any other tablet maker figures out a way to overcome the "iFans", they won't be able to compete. You have to give the ifans a REASON to leave their beloved apple products.
I guess those Russell Brand ads and that boxer.....whatever his name is, aren't working huh?
It's either on the beat or off the beat, it's that easy.
I moderate therefore I rule!
--
I have a palm pre phone and a color nook running CM7. I really like the nook and felt like I got a good value for my money. But going from my pre to my nook feels like getting my hands lopped off when it comes to actually using the thing. Android feels like only being able to run one app at a time, whereas with the card metaphor in webOS I can seamlessly bounce back and forth between apps, have many things running in the background, and just generally be more efficient. The number of apps in the webOS marketplace is not that big a deal to me. When I got the nook I thought "hot damn, now I can finally get some of the android app goodness." But in fact, all *I* really use is the nook app, kindle app, a good filesystem explorer (EZ Explorer), mail, the web browser, a FB app, and a Google+ app. I think that's about it. Not too long of a list, and basically all those apps are already there.
Wasn't this the very same problem with Linux at the start? (and some say till today they rather be buried with a copy of Photoshop than Gimp)
And it may not be the best solution, but what about offering a repository -- like Ubuntu's? Once people start to download things like Firefox, Opera for free, one can start charging little money for music, videos and fad apps (like that bird thingy).
BTW, this hint is not just for HP... ;-)
This isn't rocket science folks. Simply provide the tools for the community to plant the seeds and we'll do the rest. Create a community, support that community and provide FREE video training series similar to an Essentials Training series via Lynda.com and VTC.com to everyone at no charge. Saturate the interweb with the tools we need to help grow interest and people will flock to it. It costs way less to hire a few online teacher's to author and release an in-depth video series in Camtasia Studio 7.1 than it does to throw millions of dollars on advertising commercials. Start with the basics, you know, what is WebOS and what can it do...then introduce the Pre3 and other phones and accessories on how they can work together to enhance your daily work flow. If you must, lace them with commercials in between like YouTube does to annoy its users - whatever, just get something out there.
Then you can release a series on Beyond Essentials for the savvy user. Release a multi-part series on application development. Give the tools to the community for free. Do not expect to generate money from them. They are throw away costs. But I guarantee you that you will generate interest from the community. People will catch on and get interested. You could even offer online testing or certification in which those who complete the courses with a satisfactory grade would get a discount on WebOS hardware and/or accessories. Hopefully once interest grows then a certification would actually mean something like it used to for Microsoft and it's certification programs.
And for Christ's sake, offer your previous generation of guinea pigs who actually bought the Pre-, Pre+, Pixie, Pre2 or anything else I missed a 50% discount on either the Touchpad or Pre3. Yes, take a financial hit now but it will come back 10 fold in your favor in the future.
Love how the article makes it sound like they're just dropping the price of these willy nilly.
It's a fucking sale, they're having it from the 7th to the 9th. Companies have them all the time. It says right on the website that it's a limited time offer.
http://www.hp.com/touchpad
The article sounds more like a cock stroking for Apple.
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.
Although in The Marching Morons it was "Would you buy that for a quarter?" which reflects inflation between 1951 and today.
To a Lisp hacker, XML is S-expressions in drag.
"This coupon, plus a few rebate cards I'd been saving meant I was able to snag a Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 for about $227. Sweet deal."
http://www.sethclifford.me/stream/2011/7/25/why-yes-that-is-a-galaxy-tab-101-in-my-pocket.html
One of two things are happening here:
1. TouchPads are selling poorly and HP is so impatient about the bottom line that they can't handle having a 6 to 18 month plan to get the system popular. Oh and they must not be able to afford possibly losing some money during that time.
2. They planned this from the start. I read somewhere that the breakdown on the parts and manufacturing costs for the TouchPad were around the $300 mark which means even discounted to $400 they are making a profit, or at least not losing money. They discounted it $50 and then offered a $100 rebate (which wont last I'm sure). So they got whatever early adopters they could, then lowered the price a bit. Then offered a steep temporary discount to pull in any early adopters who were perhaps a little undecided.
I think HP probably knows better than to give up after a couple months (if that?), and I imagine they have a year or longer term plan in progress. They also arent going to be running out of money any time soon. Granted I think they could have gotten this out sooner, and they should have had the Pre 3 out at the same time. I'd like to think they had this as a plan, or least as a backup plan. I'm sure if it sold like hotcakes they wouldnt have discounted it. But to think this is indication they are already dead or giving up seems shortsighted.
-- Senior Software Engineer, Attorney appearance services, locallawyerapp.com.
Are there any tablets running Gnome3 or Ubuntu Unity? Wouldn't this be a way to get something out the door albeit with Apps which are not explicitly designed for the tablet format.
Based on very positive experience with the Palm Pre, my s.o. bought HP's 32gb Touchpad when it came out, and loves it. She just wooted another during this weekend's HP sales -- partly for the kids, and partly for experimenting with all the homebrew geekery. From a purely consumer perspective, the Touchpad rocks. On the plus side, the hardware is top-notch, with build quality as good or better than the iPad2. WebOS is truly inspired & makes iOS and Honeycomb look a little crusty. (A game of leapfrog, I know, but currently WebOS is clearly on top in terms of usability and extensibility). On the downside, I do miss having video out and a microSD slot. Iirc only Asus officially offers USB host, but it's been provided on other devices thru their communities -- I trust WebOS community efforts will exploit the MicroUSB port.
Other cool things? Going supernOOb with JustType to have it figure out what app is best for what I need to find. Then in the next breath going supergeek and installing the UbuntuChroot environment, realizing that there are thousands of "apps" available, and firing up a full office suite (OpenOffice) in an Xwindow. My bet is that our second Touchpad will have Backtrack 5 on it within an hour of arrival. I find it interesting that the Touchpad converges both the best un-geeky grandma-friendly UI (besting even the vaunted iOS), while sweeping in vast tracts of uber-geeky tools and capabilities (lands once occupied by Maemo and MeeGo) into one unified experience.
Lack of apps? Not a problem. The as-shipped config is tremendously well-thought-out, and most core apps are there. I find it hilarious when iPad-toting friends show me a "super awesome gottahaveit app" they paid $$ for... and it's essentially a browser bookmark on the desktop. Thanks, I'll take the Touchpad's skinny app catalog over iOS's app store full of thousands of iLighter/joke apps and paid-bookmark suckerware.
This rocks. Go, HP, Go!
I think not...(*poof*)
Can consumer support at hp do linux and windows ? Yes they can. Worked at an HP Customer Service Center on contract close to LA two years ago, doing hardware and network upgrades. Several large (read fortune 500) companies have service contracts with HP and many of them are running HP desktop with Linux and HP servers. They can certainly support Linux, and they do.
Windows assumes you are an idiot...Linux demands proof.
Eric Raymond. Read it.
In the Cathedral one group offers one thing, and tells you to like it. This works for some. Apple's making a good go of it.
In the Bazaar "anything in the explored universe can be had by a man with cash, from a starship to ten grains of stardust, from the ruin of a reputation to the robes of a senator with the senator inside" - Citizen of the Galaxy, RAH. Android's making a good go of this one.
Somehow these different paths keep leading to the same places, which speaks volumes about the nature of humans.
Help stamp out iliturcy.