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Tablet Shipments Decline For 13th Straight Quarter (venturebeat.com)

The tablet market has now declined year-over-year for 13 quarters straight. From a report: Q4 2017 saw a 7.9 percent year-over-year decline: 49.6 million units shipped worldwide, compared to 53.8 million units in the same quarter last year. The only silver lining is that declines for 2017 haven't been in the double-digits, like they were in 2016.

4 of 149 comments (clear)

  1. What's a computer? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Oh, that thing I have to use for anything more complicated than watching Youtube videos.

  2. Bit more than a fad by Oswald+McWeany · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I remember when tablets started getting popular I thought they were just a fad.

    I think they lasted long enough to not be considered a fad, but I think the basic problem remains. They're not as convenient as a phone and they're not as usable as a laptop. Sure, helps if you have a keyboard case... but still a laptop will always do more. I think there will always be a demographic that likes tablets (children for one)... they're just not as useful for most things. They will have their niche.

    A tablet is after all just a clunky phone or a crippled laptop.

    How many people bought a tablet expecting to do great things with it and after a month or so barely used it, instead preferring their phone (or laptop)? I imagine most tablet buyers (at least that's how most people I know who have a tablet operated).

    --
    "That's the way to do it" - Punch
  3. It's about the use case by sjbe · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I remember when tablets started getting popular I thought they were just a fad.

    Really? It seemed clear enough to me right away that they were going to be a strong market segment for a long time.

    I think they lasted long enough to not be considered a fad, but I think the basic problem remains. They're not as convenient as a phone and they're not as usable as a laptop.

    That depends entirely on what you are doing. A tablet is most useful for things where you might have used a clipboard or binder for previously. Think stuff like doctor's offices using them in patient rooms to record data. A phone doesn't have enough screen size and a laptop is too cumbersome. Tablets hit a nice form factor for tasks like that.

    They also are nice for people who don't need all the bells and whistles of a laptop but for whom a phone is too small. My grandmother uses an iPad to do various tasks. She can't handle the complexity of a laptop and a phone is too small for her to see or use efficiently. The young and the elderly as well as the (ahem) technologically impaired tend to fall into this category.

    A lot of sales people that come to my office these days use tablets and it's a good fit. A laptop is overkill and presents the company a needless administrative burden (read $$$) and security risk.

    Short version is that there are a ton of non-trivial use cases where tablets are the best option.

    A tablet is after all just a clunky phone or a crippled laptop.

    Only if you are using it wrong. It's all about the use case. There are things you can do on a tablet that are awkward to impossible on a phone because of the screen size difference. There are tasks where using a mouse/keyboard is inefficient or unnecessary. Sometimes people don't need the extra complexity of a full blown PC because they are just doing some light web browsing or email or watching some videos.

  4. Of course it would. when the price spikes... by 140Mandak262Jamuna · · Score: 5, Funny
    Yeah, it is bound to happen. Vulture capitalists, like Martin Shkreli, find tablets that are made by just one factory, buy the factory and jack up the price 800%. So many people can not afford the tablets, they buy less.

    Wait...

    This is not that kind of tablets, isn't it?

    --
    sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact