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Apple To Unveil a Cheaper iPad Next Week At Its Educational Event

Apple is holding an education-focused event on Tuesday where it's expected to launch a "low-cost iPad" alongside new education software. The goal is to win back students and teachers who have adopted similar products/services from rivals Google and Microsoft. Bloomberg reports: In its first major product event of the year, Apple will return to its roots in the education market. The event on Tuesday at Lane Technical College Prep High School in Chicago will mark the first time Apple has held a product launch geared toward education since 2012 when it unveiled a tool for designing e-books for the iPad. It's also a rare occasion for an Apple confab outside its home state of California. In Chicago, the world's most-valuable technology company plans to show off a new version of its cheapest iPad that should appeal to the education market, said people familiar with the matter. The company will also showcase new software for the classroom, said the people, who asked not to be identified discussing private plans. Apple declined to comment.

9 of 78 comments (clear)

  1. Good by Dutch+Gun · · Score: 2

    Now that there's nothing more these tablets need to do, technologically speaking, they really need to start coming down in price.

    Actually, I think it will be the same with smartphones reasonably soon. We've probably hit a technological peak of sorts, where there are literally no more substantial gains to be had by making smartphones more powerful. My prediction is that we'll see the high-end phones hover at the $1000 mark for a while, but they'll start sliding back down, as people simply don't see any added value for the minor improvements with each new model.

    Oh, the phone makers will fight this kicking and screaming, of course, but I think competitive pressure will probably win out over the next five to ten years, especially as the novelty factor wears off for most people.

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    Irony: Agile development has too much intertia to be abandoned now.
    1. Re:Good by tepples · · Score: 2

      You can develop real Android apps on an Android tablet using AIDE. If iOS as a host or target is an important feature to you, what features are you missing in Swift Playgrounds?

    2. Re:Good by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The surprising thing about Apple isn't their relative unwillingness to cut prices; that's what left them reaping most of the profit in laptops and mobile devices and something will really have to scare them to get them to try to compete on price with random plasticky Chromebooks. The surprising thing is how unconcerned they seem to be by the fact that managing the damn things is miserable, labor intensive, and relatively costly.

      For device management, iOS MDM is somewhat less dismal than Android MDM(fewer OS versions; no vendor specific 'does this depend on Samsung Knox?' nonsense); but for account management Apple IDs have stubbornly remained close to their roots as something that individuals set up, for themselves and by themselves; and iOS devices remain close to their roots as either single-user devices or single-app kiosk widgets. They have slowly made incremental concessions to management over time; but mostly in a direction that suggests that BYOD is the preferred use case; which is very, very, not interchangeable with 'organization owned and operated'.

      Managing a whole bunch of Google Apps (for business or for education, architecturally pretty much the same thing) is downright trivial by comparison; either through their interface or with AD synchronization if you are doing an implementation alongside some amount of Windows infrastructure. It is...not impressive...that Google plays better with Microsoft's directory infrastructure than iOS plays with OSX's(to the degree that that even exists anymore, with OSX 'server' being allowed to bleed out in a corner somewhere).

    3. Re:Good by Dutch+Gun · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That's just a matter of software, not hardware capabilities. That being said...

      If you're attaching a keyboard and mouse to a tablet, aren't you pretty much acknowledging that what you really need is a laptop and not a tablet? We've seen several well-publicized, failed attempts at merging mouse and touch paradigms. I'm not sure why you have such faith that Apple could pull this off where everyone else so far has failed miserably.

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      Irony: Agile development has too much intertia to be abandoned now.
    4. Re: Good by datavirtue · · Score: 4, Informative

      The 12" iPad Pro is amazing and what I would consider the bare minimum at $800-900. I bought one for my son who is able to create impeccable art without any technological distractions. I am not an Apple fan...I own no other Apple products....but the newest iPad is near perfect.

      --
      I object to power without constructive purpose. --Spock
    5. Re:Good by angel'o'sphere · · Score: 2

      BlueTooth mice work perfectly fine on iOS.

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      Cost free eBook I read (by iBook/Kobo/Amazon/ObookO/Gutenberg etc.): "The Green Odyssey" by Philip Jose Farmer.
  2. Get 'em hooked while they're young. by Immerman · · Score: 2

    Does anyone really think Apple's goal is anything other than getting them hooked on their brand of opaque "computing appliance" at a young age?

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    --- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
  3. So if I understand this right... by mark-t · · Score: 2

    They are making a cheaper, and inferior ipad to try and capture a piece of the market that isn't otherwise willing to spend the kind of money that an ipad goes for when an android tablet will do the trick just fine.

  4. Re: 800 by datavirtue · · Score: 2

    I have seen them distributed in cases and witnessed ipads survive for years. The kids were allowed to take them hime etc...

    --
    I object to power without constructive purpose. --Spock