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HP TouchPad Go: $99?

redletterdave writes "The HP TouchPad Go, which is a smaller version of the company's signature TouchPad, may go on sale for $99 like its predecessor. The tablet features a 1023 x 768 resolution display, runs on webOS, and also has a removable cover with soft-touch coating to minimize fingerprints on the 7-inch screen. HP's new tablet also comes with a removable battery, 32GB of storage, a 3G radio, a five-megapixel camera and LED flash. HP designed the TouchPad Go around the same time as the larger model, but it failed to reach production stages when the company decided to kill off all devices running on the doomed webOS. If the tablet indeed sells for $99, it would be the cheapest tablet in the world besides the Aakash tablet, which was released by the Indian government for $35."

19 of 146 comments (clear)

  1. Misleading title/summary by ethan961 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Only a handful of these are known to exist and as far as anyone knows they never went past pre-production models. There is no warehouse full of them to get rid of in the first place, which is what the original HP Touchpad sale was about. HP's also not about to start making them, especially not to sell at a loss.

    1. Re:Misleading title/summary by ethan961 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      That said, having one of the original TouchPads myself, I love the Touchstone charging and WebOS really is beautiful for a tablet. I would definitely purchase a Go if I could, since it's the same thing in a smaller package that would be nicer for tossing in my backpack.

  2. 1023? Not 1024? Cheapskates ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    The sheer nerve.

  3. Not the cheapest by Improv · · Score: 4, Informative

    There are plenty of very low-end chinese tablets that are under $99. They're typically terribly slow, but you can get them.

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    For every problem, there is at least one solution that is simple, neat, and wrong.
  4. Non-story by Junta · · Score: 4, Interesting

    A story speculating that devices may or may not exist that HP may or may not sell at a price which might or might not be $99, without so much as a hint that there is evidence suggesting they ever actually *made* any production-level product beyond pre-release testing and evaluation units. Given the Touchpad Go's schedule probably wouldn't have had it in mass production at the time HP killed the product line, it seems unlikely that they would have gone forward with production, unless their supply chain already had them over a barrel (which was allegedly the cause of the second wave of firesale, the third being to flush out returns). The problem is any thinking right now is merely speculation.

    I'd probably take the plunge and get it if offered just for a WebOS device to play with (I have a few Palm Pres, but it's hard to justify playing with them when my Android phone has much better hardware in every way (bigger, higher resolution screen, faster processors, 4 times the ram, a camera that actually focuses, etc) and actually has support for things like Netflix.

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  5. Re:How does "Go" relate to "Go Corp?" by larry+bagina · · Score: 4, Informative

    trademarks expire if not used.

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    Do you even lift?

    These aren't the 'roids you're looking for.

  6. Screw Standard Resolutions by stilldead · · Score: 5, Funny

    1023x768??? This a really good plan.

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  7. Linkbait headline on TFA by Jay+L · · Score: 4, Informative

    TL;DR: "There was going to be a TouchPad Go, but it never got produced. Film at 11."

  8. Re:Sounds good to me by mrchaotica · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I missed the first fire sale, and that's fine because I didn't know about it. I'm pissed off about the Ebay sale, though, because I clicked "Buy it Now" the exact second the sale started (and kept trying for half an hour) and still didn't get a damn thing!

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    "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

  9. Article is trolling for page hits by Bushwuly · · Score: 5, Interesting
    I'm typing this on a TouchPad now, and follow webOS news pretty regularly hoping for positive news. However, the original source that this article supposedly refers to (http://www.webosnation.com/review-hp-touchpad-go) specifically states that:

    ... the fact that this tablet will never see the light of day puts a rather large damper on the party.

    P.S. The only one of these ever sold was on eBay a month or so ago for over $700

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    Get over yourself.
  10. Re:1023? Not 1024? Cheapskates ... by The+End+Of+Days · · Score: 5, Funny

    They had to cut something to get it down to a hundred bucks.

  11. Re:Im in !! by 93+Escort+Wagon · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Such a good price/performance tablet was LONG overdue.

    Yeah it's amazing what a company can do when it doesn't factor in what it costs to manufacture a product but is simply trying to clear out inventory.

    But if you're implying this would be a sustainable business model - you're delusional.

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  12. Price by SuperKendall · · Score: 5, Funny

    1023x768??? This a really good plan.

    Come on, you wonder why this is the only tablet that can be sold for $100? It's the extra pixel that makes all the difference. The guy who owns the patent on pixel 1024 has been licensing it at an obscene markup to manufactures, it's good to see someone finally put a foot down and stop the madness.

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    1. Re:Price by hawguy · · Score: 4, Funny

      I'm not sure if this is an attempt to be funny... or your a fucken idiot

      Whose the idiot when you don't even know about the 1024th pixel patent!

  13. Re:$99 TouchPad 2 by 93+Escort+Wagon · · Score: 4, Informative

    I don't see why HP should not revive the TouchPad Go (renamed to TouchPad 2, the other one renamed to Touch Pad Classic). There's a market out there, and they can make money other than on the hardware; (licensed) peripherals, App Catalog sales, there's already a Kindle app, perhaps also introduce a Nook Reader app and get a percentage of sales through that from B&N. Wouldn't that be cool, Kindle and Nook on one device?

    Disclosure: I have a WiFi-only (= no GPS) TouchPad (32GB, $149) and use it as an e-reader about 75% of the time; unfortunately I have to convert everything to pdf as I haven't taken the time yet to use the alternate installer (for which I believe there is a proper reader that handles epub, etc.).

    Somehow you truly believe selling a tablet at a price point that's hundreds of dollars below the manufacturing cost is a sustainable business model. Tell me, how much have YOU spent on extra apps, peripherals, etc. for the TouchPad you own? And, if you've bought peripherals - do you believe they cost nothing to manufacture?

    I really don't get how some of you can be so disconnected from reality.

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  14. Summary is crap. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    1023, really? I'm betting it's 1024x768, but that's from the article -- worth a [sic] IMO, but I'll let it go.

    As the article says, "many wonder" if it will be firesaled for $99, but there's no new reason to suppose any significant stock exists; it remains the same baseless speculation it's been for months.

    And as for second-cheapest tablet, a dozen cheaper ones beg to differ.

    I like the tablet and this is good news, but

  15. Re:$99 TouchPad 2 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    Oh hey and you can do that on both the Kindle Fire, Nook Color and Nook Tablet for $199-249 by sideloading apps or on the Kindle Fire by just downloading it from a direct link. Amazing how they can do that for half the price...

  16. Re:Im in !! by hairyfeet · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I think the problem is everyone is dreaming of iMoney and thus making them overpowered and thus expensive. I mean think about it, what does the typical consumer do with a pad? They check their email, play Angry birds, and watch video. Now the video could be easily taken care of with a broadcom chip which is cheap, especially when you are buying in bulk, I doubt Angry birds is that big of a CPU hog, and email and webpages aren't gonna need much if you disallow flash support.

    So I don't see why someone couldn't make a really nice tablet in the $180-$200 price range and make around $10-$15 a unit on them. A dualcore ARM CPU in the 1GHz range isn't that high and resistive will work fine for the screen as long as the OS is tweaked for it instead of just using a vanilla OS unoptimized for the platform like many are doing with android now. So while $100 might not be doable I don't see why sub $200 while still doing the tasks folks want a tablet for couldn't be achieved.

    Personally i thought Dell had the right idea with that convertible netbook/tablet but screwed up with the choice of chip and the price which was too high for an atom based unit. Make it an AMD E-50 so it has enough power to do 1080P over HDMI, it'll also play games and even let them run their Windows programs, and price it for around $350 and the things would sell like hotcakes. Sadly american companies have all looked at Apple and see iMoney and frankly just won't accept 5%-8% profits on sales anymore as they all want to be Apple and make mounds of iCash anymore. But there is only one Apple and if this past year and a half has proved anything its that if you set your price equal or better than the iPad people will go with the more recognized brand. But if they were to target the masses with a machine that's "good enough" at the right price point there isn't any reason they can't make good steady profits year after year.

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  17. Re:Someone is missing a pixel by ZombieThoughts · · Score: 5, Funny

    Someone is missing 768 pixels.