Android On HP TouchPad
NicknamesAreStupid writes "As fast as you can say '$99 blowout sale,' PC World reports on an Android port to the now defunct HP TouchPad. 'Of course, it will turn out to be the best Android pad ever, making the iPad stink by comparison,' reports Muphy's Law Reports."
HP have inadvertently discovered how to create huge demand and massive customer base overnight: find the right price point and lots of publicity
No, it's obviously much simpler than that: Price.
When it comes to android tablets, there's a lot of high-end offerings that can compete with the iPad in terms on performance, the problem is that they cost as much as (if not more) than the iPad.
Then there's the other end of the spectrum - the "cheap" android tablets. They're cheap in every regard: resistive screens, slow processors and minimal memory, they're mere toys. The fact that the touchpad is flying off the shelves shows that people are waiting for decent tablets to come down in price and don't care if it's not an iPad.
Android's tablet offerings could learn from this (And yes, I know it would be impossible to produce this tablet at this price and make a profit).
+1 IDisagreeSoHeMustBeATrollOrAnAstroturferOrAShill
The "summary" makes it sound like a port is available now, and then throws in an iPad comparison that's nowhere in the original article. From TFA:
and my favorite...
So this is 3 guys planning a porting effort of an older version of Android. (Google hasn't released the source code to Honeycomb yet.) Also from TFA:
Really, that's not clear? You think HP might be planning major OS updates for a tablet they just fire-saled?
of course, since it has a lot in common with the iPad. Size, position of ports and buttons and I can even use the original ipad sleeve with it. What I like on the Touchpad is the swooshing of apps to the top to close them. I do not think it is a good idea to run android on it. WebOS is just fine.
Mods, please irrevocably suspend user account MyCleanAss (#2444274) as an obvious spammer. Also, please pursue legal action against this person who is clearly violating the Geeknet terms of use.
My wife picked up our touchpad yesterday from Harvey Norman for 98 AUD. Its hard not to be happy at that price. I can see that most of the time we will use the web browser to it doesn't matter much what operating system we run.
http://michaelsmith.id.au
isn't their spirit what made america great in the first place?
They're spamming scumbags, but yeah... their spirit has certainly played a part in making America what it is today...
I've been thinking the same, however Apple does have a advantages over android vendors and others. The obvious one is their huge brand recognition and a few verdor lock-in tricks their dock connector. But mostly they have a pricing advantage, they can put lots of pressure on their suppliers, they have the advantage of scale while the android market is split between several players. But more importantly, they can afford to take a lower margin on the iPad sales because all those iPad's out there will generate revenue through iTunes and the app store. The android vendors will have to make a high enough margin on the sale of the hardware, because after that it won't be generating any revenue anymore. So I guess it might actually not be so easy to compete with the iPad on price without drastically compromising the hardware.
But who knows, if somebody does pull it off I'd be first in line.
Welcome to Slashdot.
Won't help. The spammer continually creates new accounts.
http://michaelsmith.id.au
Really? My friend told me MyCleanPC is malware. I am now worried MyCleanPC could be bad and make all my gigabits run slower if I use it. My computing has many gigabits plus lots of rams too. It is hard to trust MyCleanPC and other products when I see adverts in message boards.
So we know now what companies have to do to beat the iPad: Build tablets and sell them for about $220 less than the cost of the parts. I wonder at which point Apple would start buying those tablets and taking them apart because that is cheaper than buying the parts. (I was told the Touchpad had the same screen as the original iPad, and what Apple pays for the screen is not far away from the $99 that the Touchpad sold for).
But maybe the lameness filter could be adapted to reject any post which contains several links to the exact same URL. Any such post is obviously spam.
The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
Yet, when I did a search for "apple" it doesn't come up once in the article. I even read it and it's not about apple in anyway. Are you mental?
Then HP should either consider to go back on its own footsteps or to sack the CEO.
Better both.
And, by the way, the iPad really stinks.
Sent as ripples into the electromagnetic field. No single photon has been harmed in the process.
I agree apple does have those advantages, but the same can be said for the iPhone, yet Apple would rather make huge profits than sell the most devices. I don't think their tablets will be much different, but who knows what the future holds.
+1 IDisagreeSoHeMustBeATrollOrAnAstroturferOrAShill
There are a couple ways to sell a tablet for $99, at this level of hardware quality, and make a profit overall.
However, they all involve DRM, and treating the tablet as if it's rented, not owned - monthly service charges on the OS, mandatory minimum monthly app purchases, etc., etc.
Alternately, strap a 3G or 4G radio to every tablet, and subsidize the crap out of them with cell plans.
Another way to do it, I guess, would simply be credit - sell them at $99 down, $19.99 a month for 24 months.
there's not that many high end android tablet offerings.
there's many ANNOUNCED high end android tablet offerings, but look what's for sale and it's not that many, it's almost just xoom and tab. anyhow.. a devices value shouldn't be determined on future sw updates - because that's always a lie, a stinky britchy lie. it's still useful for what you can do with it today, buying it on promises of future updates is like buying a xoom and expecting that it would run android 5.0. many of those high end android tablets are even announced by players who don't have early access to android, it seems like there's just two major manufacturers who do, motorola and samsung - which both bring biggest bucks to google and are the most visible on googles home turf usa.
and impossible to produce at that price and make a profit? well, blame their display and cpu suppliers - those could be produced with lower profit, the profit margin on them is pulled out of some guys hat, that's how hi-tech pricing works, it's not "well this takes this much ore so it's price is xxx" like with commodities. I'm betting they bought a batch of qualcomms stuff for a bad price originally. it's no good buying chips on steep "best of the best" premium and then letting them sit on shelves.
the hard part about the android port is probably going to be drivers, though I don't see why they don't just port alien dalvik over, no need for "full" vanilla android port, it runs on meego already so probably would be possible to port over to webos too.
world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
I don't think the drivers are going to be that difficult. The CPU/GPU/etc are from the snapdragon platform, there's plenty of source code for kernels out for that already. I'm not sure it has any components that can't be found in other tablets/phones either, it'll just be a case of gluing it all together. The main issue will probably making Gingerbread workable without the hardware buttons, but then once ICS comes out, it'll be a non-issue.
Alien Davlik has been mentioned as well, but as far as I can tell, the developers feel it'd be better to port to Android and ensure the device has a future upgrade path since nobody knows what HP is doing with WebOS.
+1 IDisagreeSoHeMustBeATrollOrAnAstroturferOrAShill
That's just it. I have a feeling that these companies feel the market justifies a high price and so there is probably a ton of premium baked into these things. With the craze going around the hp touchpad, I wouldn't be surprised if one of the lesser manufacturers takes a hint and drops their price for high end tablet hardware to ride the same wave.
There's slowly starting to emerge a "middle-end" for Android tablets.
Basically tablet with similar specs to the high-end machines with the same components, but of lower physical build quality, usually less battery capacity and unknown brand names. Prices halfway between an iPad and the lowest-end tablets, at around $200-300.
Slashdot social media options: AIM, ICQ, Yahoo, Jabber and Mobile Text. Why no MySpace?
(*delivered in the best Clint Eastwood voice*)
You're really getting on my nerves, sonny. You better be careful, I've DDoSed people for less...
We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
Tricking people into buying snakeoil has made America great?
Now a lot starts to make sense...
We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
"But more importantly, they can afford to take a lower margin on the iPad sales because all those iPad's out there will generate revenue through iTunes and the app store."
Maybe they can afford to, but they don't. Their profits on iPads dwarf the profits on other tablets.
If I didn't have absolutely NOTHING to do, I wouldn't be here.
Perhaps the mods should modify the script to auto suspend any account who links to MyCleanPC?
TFTY
Just a fucking pity they can't employ just as sophisticated of an anti-spambot on a tech-savvy website like, oh, say, HERE maybe?
It would be dead-easy to implement, any post with a link repeated more than twice in it cans the post, and 3 of them or more cans the poster. It's that fucking simple. It won't cure all cases but come on, this dickless asswipe has dozens of sock-puppet accounts here and spams nearly every thread here with 2-3 identical copies of his e-xcrement. I'm reasonably sure that the jag-off is doing this on other social media and tech websites too. What's the matter, not getting enough suckers to scam from the TV ads on basic cable?
I realize this forum is based on (almost) complete freedom of speech and not editing or moderating anything, but hanging's too good for this fuckstick.
-- You are in a maze of little, twisty passages, all different... --
You mean Honeycomb, not Gingerbread. Only the kernel is GPL. You can get the source for that. The rest of Android itself is Google's to do whatever they please with. Before Honeycomb it was Apache liscensed. Now the source is closed.
Their stated reason was they didn't want people to create a "really bad user experience" trying to cram Honeycomb into devices not capable of taking it.
Always sounded more to me like they gave Motorola a deal where they would be the only Honeycomb vendor with the Xoom.
As an owner of a Toshiba Thrive, and several IPad 2s, I'd have to disagree with you completely.
Can you expand the storage by 128GB with an SD card on the IPad[2]? No
Can you plug HDMI and USB into the IPad[2]? No
Does the IPad[2] have a user replaceable battery if yours dies, and you don't want the downtime of a standard replacement/fix? No
Does the IPad[2] have a 1280x800 or better screen? No
Can you get an IPad2 for $550, with 16GB of storage? No
Does the IPad[2] have more apps? Yes
-- Does it's apps contain a wider range of functionality? No
Can you get a large range of apps to give you most of the fun/functionality you need on an IPad[2], for free? No
Does the IPad[2] have flash? No
So, the advantages ot the IPad[2] are more apps (not necessarily functionally more, just more), and probably less malware (only a problem if you are ADD or a moron when downloading software), no flash, and it helps if your wallet is too heavy. Oh, and you get a device with a logo that shouts "I'm a pretentious prick!"
Yum.
Self proclaimed typo king, and inventor of the bear destroying coffee table (patent not pending).
this becomes public. I was trying to order one yesterday for just this reason. Kinda pissed.
I still think people who are curious about them have been holding off because the price/usefulness ratio is still not there yet.
Android in a phone is good. I can do lots of cool things with it. As WiDi gets more common, I would be happy to connect my phone to a display with a keyboard, mouse and even use my phone's touch screen as an additional input device. Tablets offer more display size, but that's about it. I am okay with a tiny touch keyboard on my phone, but when the touch keyboard becomes huge and still takes up most of the screen, I am at a loss to wonder what they are thinking.
I like Angry Birds on a tablet. I like running a picture slideshow on my tablet. That's just about it. Everything else goes on my phone.
I was curious about ebook readers. I'm not curious any more. I was curious about tablets. Not curious any more. I think the public needs to catch up a bit.
Putting Android on the HP Touchpad was the first thing I thought of hearing the news. But you know, if/when people are successful at doing that, it will soon be forgotten. Newer/better hardware is coming and soon people will lose interest in them. About $100 is the correct price-point for things like this.
You're thinking "honeycomb" and I wouldn't worry about it. Android 3.0 is one of those growth steps. Once the next version is out and the sources isn't there? Then there's something to be concerned about.
That weakness is killing them. They still aren't the world's most valuable company. Whats with that?
I didn't find out until late Saturday afternoon and by then, all the stores in the area were sold out. Over the course of the next two days, I went from one bogged down retailer website to another until I had amassed three confirmation orders via email, for HP Touchpads. All three were canceled via email yesterday, including the one from CDW that actually charged my debit card. There are still several retailers(Newegg, Circuit City, ect..) who have them in stock(verified via telephone), but have not lowered their prices yet. There is also the matter of anyone who didn't sell their stock and returned them to HP instead. Hopefully I'll end up with one by the time this is all said and done.
I don't have a need for a touchpad for the same reason I don't have a need for an iPad. But, for $99, I think I could find a use for it. =)
Archos are releasing a 101 G9 model in September and it's looking extremely promising from the specs. It's even expandable to 3G via an inexpensive expansion that doubles up as a PC usb modem. If it sells well it might act as the cluebat to beat some sense into the other manufacturers.
Thinking back to OS tests from this specific HP touchpad, iirc, the constraining factor was the hardware. While I'm glad that people will have a developer community in conjunction with this sell-off, porting Android to something with an arguably bad hardware configuration isn't going to solve it.
Damn. That sounds great. If only you'd included a link to the website for this miracle product. I don't know computers too good so I don't know how to find it.
You have to post a story saying that mycleanass is selling $49 samsung 10" tablets, 1M in stock.
email tablet@mycleanass.net
Liberty freedom are no1, not dicks in suits.
I suppose the first excuse will disappear when Ice Cream Sandwich comes out and 3.x and 2.x get merged together once more. Perhaps by then we'll also see what happens with Amazon.
Something like the zMooth app which allows gestures to emulate the android hardware buttons could be a starting point for the lack of physical buttons on the HP.
I don't suppose there are any retailers out there that still have them for $99, are there??
"Ask not what your country can do for you." --John F. Kennedy
We have rolled out almost every type of tablet as a test to our users. They have claimed that they were needed, and loved them at first. A after a few weeks, the vast majority of the users have said that they rarely use it anymore....and now are back to their laptop. Maybe for sitting on the couch they work, but for productivity they seem to have been a flop around here.
Right tool for the right job I suspect and I find the iPad extremely useful for work.
Case in point: I had my laptop go out of commission for three weeks and still can't get it to connect to a non-work network (I hate Windows 7). I had an iPad and began using our over-the-air mail sync to augment. I found I could do over 90% of what I needed. My job includes reviewing many documents, tracking program deliverables, managing crisis's by email, and generating basic content for others. With iWorks, iBook (PDF), note taking software, and my mail link I was good to go.
Now would I use it to generate 20 page PowerPoint ... of course not. However, that's what my backup desktop is for and I actually find that I'm more likely to take my iPad to meetings than my laptop today.
I love the sound of distortion in the morning -- webcommando
Can you expand the storage by 128GB with an SD card on the IPad[2]? No
Do most people in the target market care? No.
Are you in the target market? No.
Can you plug HDMI and USB into the IPad[2]? No
Can you plug HDMI into the iPad[2] with an available dongle? Yes.
Was the previous quoted question a half-truth? Yes.
Does the IPad[2] have a user replaceable battery if yours dies, and you don't want the downtime of a standard replacement/fix? No
I've got no argument with that.
Does the IPad[2] have a 1280x800 or better screen? No
Or that.
Can you get an IPad2 for $550, with 16GB of storage? No
You're right.
Can you get an iPad2 for $499, with 16GB of storage? Yes.
Does the IPad[2] have more apps? Yes
-- Does it's apps contain a wider range of functionality? No
Are subjective statements subjective? Yes.
Can you get a large range of apps to give you most of the fun/functionality you need on an IPad[2], for free? No
Are subjective statements still subjective? Still yes.
Have either of us tried every single app available for the iPad in order to make an objective statement regarding app availability, pricing, and functionality? No.
Does the IPad[2] have flash? No
Might this be regarded by some people as a feature, rather than a missing feature? Yes.
Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
One retailer sold out, but Future Shop and Best Buy in Canada has raised the price back up to $399. I guess they thought this demand was something they could profit on.
Nobody's buying end of life tech for full price. I'm going to wait until it drops back to $99.
Computers are like air-conditioners - they work great until you start opening windows.
Never happened. True story.
Right tool for the right job I suspect and I find the iPad extremely useful for work.
Case in point: I had my laptop go out of commission for three weeks and still can't get it to connect to a non-work network (I hate Windows 7). I had an iPad and began using our over-the-air mail sync to augment. I found I could do over 90% of what I needed. My job includes reviewing many documents, tracking program deliverables, managing crisis's by email, and generating basic content for others. With iWorks, iBook (PDF), note taking software, and my mail link I was good to go.
If you can do 90% of your job from an iPad, then there's about a 99% chance you're an expendable employee. Better hope the company doesn't catch on.
I thought it was "soon elected".
Really had to choke on that one, eh?
When you say 'think in different ways than we do', in which sense do you me 'we'? Is it the crowd running around in your skull, or are you assuming that others share your obsession?
Grownup? Then why do you sound like a six-year old pottymouth?
Actually, no... I think of specific people who have real trouble running Windows or Mac OS X based machines. but do manage to use iOS based devices. I actually tried avoiding the "think different(ly)" phrase, and apparently I oversaw this one. If you have a person with 0% technical knowledge and 0% willingness to learn anything technological, then you've got a potential happy iOS user. Such a person is my wife. She never got along with her Windows XP machine, and basically, I had to do everything if she needed something to be done. I wasted a ton of money on an expensive iMac in the hope that would help. It did a bit, resulting in less work for me, but it was far from what I'd expected. Then, by a series of unwanted events I got her an iPhone (I originally didn't want to get her an iPhone) and what happened was absolutely incredible. She actually started to use the Internet as I have done for years, she uses it to buy songs, she sends pictures to her friends by email, she now uses facebook and youtube. It is amazing.
She is not stupid, she is just absolutely not tech inclined at all. For me that was an eye opener. iDevices are not for us geeks, they are for the rest of "them".
For the record: I do not use Apple products myself. I use Linux on the cheapest machines I can buy or get out of the dumpster. For me, Apple is too expensive as I do know how to manage computers.
Ahhh...the great dumpster continuum. Many a free computer will be found there. -- sowth (748135)
Oh. oV' Course.
Indeed. Apple maintains to this day that the iTunes/App Store is largely revenue neutral - after paying developers and operational costs, they make little if anything on it. All that profit Apple is making is on the hardware; between the iPhone and the iPad they purchase parts in such a massive volume that they can get parts for cheaper than anyone else. There's no subsidy going on, Apple legitimately makes a killing off of the iPad in hardware sales alone and that's why it's so far been impossible to beat Apple.
Websites that rely on Adobe's CPU-guzzler of a proprietary plugin are broken by design. Actual websites work fine in Safari on the iPad.
No, unless you want to pay extra for it. The iPad2 with 16GB of storage is only $499.
Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
Can you name one 10" tablet currently on the market that has the same battery life (or better) than the iPad 2? Is it also as thin (or thinner), as light (or lighter), and the same price (or cheaper) than the iPad 2?
"Pretentious prick", indeed.
Dear Slashdot: next time you want to mess with the site, add a rich-text editor for comments.
Typo, user of several IPad2s (which I've had to use for business reasons, and not being able to use my own device)
*sigh*
Self proclaimed typo king, and inventor of the bear destroying coffee table (patent not pending).
Presumably the source will be opened up again with the release of ICS, which is supposed to be a "universal" Android that can play nicely on any device, phone or tablet. I'm not sure I completely agree with Google's decision not to release Honeycomb source - you probably wouldn't want to run it on a phone, but for example the Nook Color is supported by CyanogenMod and possibly could have benefited from Honeycomb (right now it runs Gingerbread with some "tablet tweaks" that the team provided). But bottom line, this phone/tablet divergence in Android is set to re-converge with next release, perhaps late this year or early next year.
This is the ASSHOLE that has all the sock-puppet accounts.
The stupid fucking bastard posted one of the spams under the "Opportunist" user accidentally. This is the account he uses when he wants to be taken seriously.
I sincerely doubt it. Someone with a UID that low, with a history of worthwhile comments, isn't fully retarded enough---barring any serious head injury---to think that posting that kind of shit here would do anything for his product.
Boot Windows, Linux, and ESX over the network for free.
I wonder if that's why Apple is trying to physically get Samsung off the shelves in Europe. There doesn't seem to be much danger of competing Android tablets decimating iPad sales - its pretty clear now that they are not going to succeed unless they are (a) significantly cheaper than the iPad and/or (b) offer something obviously different (not just incrementally better specs such as a slightly faster processor or higher res camera which will be leapfrogged by Apple in a few months time).
So why is Apple trying to block them? Whatever the rights/wrongs of their case, I can't see it succeeding long-term (at most, it will just establish what combination of features make something an iPad lookalike rather than just a tablet so competitors can work around it) - and it risks a Streisand effect. But if the Android Tablet train is about to hit the buffers, getting them off the shelves for a few months now would prevent any more fire sales in the run-up to Xmas.
Personally, I'm still waiting for this which actually seems to tick the "offer something clearly distinct from an iPad" box - but its been "coming soon" for ever and, from the link, I see they've brilliantly decided to up the minimum memory and push up the price. Otherwise, I'll stick with my iPad 1 until we see (a) what MotoGoogle will do or (b) whether the rumors of an Amazon tablet are true.
In a survey of 100 programmers, 111111 thought that duck-typing was a good idea.
iDevices are not for us geeks, they are for the rest of "them".
Pretty much it right there. I know a handful of people that love Apple devices to death that actually work around computers and would qualify as "computer people", but the vast majority of the rest are the people that do nothing but surf the web, buy shit online and listen to music. You get out of "burning a CD" territory and they're completely lost.
So yes, here on /. we can trot out any number of people that are computer geniuses and love Apple's offerings but /. is so far removed from the norm that doesn't mean anything. Go down to your local Apple Store on a Saturday afternoon and start polling the people shopping there to get a gist of their general knowledge of computers. I assure you, most of them will stare at you like you're growing an arm out of your ass and then get lost in another dippy iPad game on the demo unit. Just talking to people shopping at the Apple Store will demonstrate that they are not computer people, at all, unless they either work there or are that one random guy that actually has a Mac Pro and does real work on the platform.
There are also cheaper android tablets that have capacitive touch screens along with decent processors and memory. The main issue is that you have to find a decent Chinese seller online and buy direct. Prices are around $200, give or take a bit.
Similar tablets exist in local B&M, but at about 2-3x the price.
If you can do 90% of your job from an iPad, then there's about a 99% chance you're an expendable employee. Better hope the company doesn't catch on.
Most executives can do 90% of their job using an iPad. They are expendable (like you and every other employee, don't kid yourself) but if they are "expended" they get that nice golden parachute thing...
iPads most definitely fill a highly useful niche, and the form factor is here to stay. As voice input matures, that "keyboard" device will become more and more optional...
Galileo: "The Earth revolves around the Sun!"
Score: -1 100% Flamebait
I don't know... I got a good chuckle out of this:
I might be in favor of just letting him ride if we continue to get gems like that.
We always knew Comcast was corrupt, here's the proof: http://tech.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1909890&cid=34545432
Android's tablet offerings could learn from this (And yes, I know it would be impossible to produce this tablet at this price and make a profit).
You clearly know nothing about business or economics. You make it up in volume. Duh.
Cool post bro, highfive \o
The Bill of Materials for the Touchpad is $296 (Source: http://www.isuppli.com/Teardowns/News/Pages/HP-TouchPad-Carries-$318-Bill-of-Materials.aspx) and that doesn't include manufacturing costs. How on earth are you going to knock more than 2/3 of that price off? Volume will only get you so far.
+1 IDisagreeSoHeMustBeATrollOrAnAstroturferOrAShill
It's not advertising to us. It's just trying to increase it's page rank.
That's why even after modding it down they still accomplish what they set out to do.
Some of what I say is fact, some is conjecture, the rest I'm just blowing out my ass...you guess.
Apple bungled the iPhone by going AT&T-only in the states. This meant that other device makers could sell to users on other networks, which provided a market for Android apps, which in turn made Android handsets a more attractive proposition for customers in other countries where iPhones were available on other carriers.
Simply saying that it happened with phones so it will happen with tablets, isn't good enough. Tablets don't need the mobile networks in the same way as phones, so Android tablet manufacturers can't rely on the route to market that was available to them when they were starting out with phones.
I keep forgetting most people on the internet are jackasses, morons, or both. I was being silly. Sorry for not being more obvious, I thought it might ruin the joke. Of course you can't take a loss on every unit sold and still profit unless you're buying publicity to try to generate that profit elsewhere. But if you keep the scope narrowed to the singular product the old joke applies just fine: "Make it up in volume"
Cool post bro, highfive \o
Who's talking about a laptop? If you want a laptop.... buy a laptop.
Only one of the criteria you listed really matters.
You can't be bothered to pick up a tablet that's 2mm thicker and 0.1lb heavier? I think the "pretentious prick" label fits well.
--Jeremy
Jesus was a liberal
Can you plug HDMI and USB into the IPad[2]? No
That's funny, my friend's office has a projector where he has an HDMI cable coming down so that he can plug it into his iPad 2.
Can you get an IPad2 for $550, with 16GB of storage? No
No, that's because the 16GB one is $499.
-- Does it's apps contain a wider range of functionality? No
Purely opinion.
Can you get a large range of apps to give you most of the fun/functionality you need on an IPad[2], for free? No
Again, purely opinion. And the answer is yes.
If you gave me one of these HP tablets for free, I would turn it down. Why would I want something that I can't repair myself, that, after less than 2 months, is already being abandoned by the manufacturer?
If you bought one of these, you have my deepest sympathies. If you bought one after they announced the fire sale, I shake my head in disbelief at you. If you're one of the nudniks buying for $250 on Ebay, then I point and laugh at you because you're a flaming idiot.
Of course to be fair I wouldn't want an iPad either, I have no use for it, and I have no desire for a Nook or Kindle, either. But wasting any time, let alone money, on something that's orphaned? Insanity.
Are YOU using the TOOL, or is the TOOL using YOU? Think about it!
Apple had little choice - they went to the carriers and AT&T were the only ones who said yes, but in exchange wanted an exclusive deal. No one other than Apple really believed that Apple's "iPhone, whatever that is" would take off - remember, the previous attempt was that Motorola disaster (the ROKR was it?) that was launched at Macworld and had iTunes integration and so on.
Once it was a success, AT&T were well placed with their very long exclusivity deal in the US. You can be damn sure Apple wanted to give it to other carriers (namely Verizon) as soon as they were contractually able to - they are a hardware company that makes the bulk of their money on hardware sales!
App Store profits for Apple: ||
iPad profit on hardware sale: ||
Apple do not take a lower profit on the iPad because the App Store/iTunes is making hay for them - they have stated repeatedly (and in official earning statements) that the store is break even/small profit for them. The vast, vast bulk of their profit is in hardware sales of iPhones and iPads.
The App Store and iTunes Store are the things that they run at very low profit (for Apple - the two stores are very profitable for content owners like the music industry and software developers) in order to drive hardware sales.
Those were supposed to be two unequal lines, the iPad profit line being considerably longer.
If you're hoping Flash will have acceptable performance on that tablet, I think you will be sorely disappointed.
You can make this work if you do what the game console makers have historically done - get commitments from parts suppliers on price reductions over the expected lifetime of the product (due to Moore's law, etc) and aggressively plan as much cost-reduction as possible. You then sell the product for what it *should* cost when the product is mature. You lose a fortune on the first units, but the bleeding stops and eventually you can sell them at a profit.
Of course, if you mis-estimate the lifecycle, or fail to get the expected volumes, this is *really* risky. It's also not really clear what the expected lifetime of a tablet is, yet. The market's just not as mature as the video game console market.
MyCleanPC gave me Dutch elm disease and gave my new phone number to my ex-girlfriend!
the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
It's worse than that. MyCleanPC ran over my dog. Twice.
isn't their spirit what made america great in the first place?
No, the chinese even beat the US with fake stuff
my karma will be here long after I'm gone
As an owner of a Toshiba Thrive, and several IPad 2s, I'd have to disagree with you completely.
So, the advantages ot the IPad[2] are more apps (not necessarily functionally more, just more), and probably less malware (only a problem if you are ADD or a moron when downloading software), no flash, and it helps if your wallet is too heavy. Oh, and you get a device with a logo that shouts "I'm a pretentious prick!"
Yum.
Ah, which explains why you bought one Android tablet and several iPad 2s, because the Android is better than iOS, so you bought several iOS tablets.... wait, what?? Car analogy time: Ford sux! That's why I have several Fords and one Chevy, cuz Fords sux!@
my karma will be here long after I'm gone
The keyboard has been dying since the 90s, IIRC. So has the mainframe. So have text based programing languages. And AI. And Lisp. And x86.
I know tobacco is bad for you, so I smoke weed with crack.