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It Sure Looks Like Google's $599 Celeron Pixel Slate is Dead (androidpolice.com)

Two variants of the Pixel Slate, a tablet-laptop hybrid that Google unveiled last year, have been "out of stock" for months now, leading many to believe that Google may have quietly gotten rid of them. From a report: [The Pixel Slate that are powered by the Celeron processor] are nowhere to be seen. They've been out of stock on the Google Store -- the only place these models were very briefly available -- since shortly after launch, four months ago. The $599 and $699 versions of the Pixel Slate brought sub-iPad Pro pricing to Google's prosumer tablet, even if it turned out that the tablet itself beat the iPad in pretty much no sense that mattered. Marques Brownlee, typically known for his easy-going takes and willingness to embrace misunderstood tech products, basically called the cheaper Celeron Slate a turd. This was not a good look for Google. Shortly after that, the Celeron Pixel Slate showed up as sold out on the Google Store, and that status hasn't changed since.

21 of 41 comments (clear)

  1. And this is a surprise how? by Sebby · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Google kills off pretty much anything they put out.

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    1. Re:And this is a surprise how? by EvilSS · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Google kills off pretty much anything they put out.

      To be fair, they haven't put out much worth keeping lately.

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    2. Re:And this is a surprise how? by rtb61 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Why is that fair, think of the people man, think of the people. Each time Google puts out a crap product and then kills it because it is a crap product, there are millions of people who get sucked into that crap product experience and then after all their trials and troubles, Google rather than fixing it, just meh, shuts it down and wanders off like nothing happened. Those users were used, crash test dummies, to save Google money on testing the product, just getting users to test it for Google at their own expense, man, that is just plain nasty as.

      Why does Google put out so much shite, well it is pretty clear by now, they a a locked in believer of free user testing, let the suckers do it for free, rather than Google pay for it, which pretty much makes them a pack of shitty trolls, trolling their user base with shitty products.

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    3. Re:And this is a surprise how? by EvilSS · · Score: 2

      Getting invested in a Google product is like putting a paper clip in an outlet. Every kid has to do it once to learn not to do it again.

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    4. Re:And this is a surprise how? by AHuxley · · Score: 1

      Did people remove the ad OS and ad browser and go full free Linux?

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    5. Re:And this is a surprise how? by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      It may not be dead.

      In its current state it's unusable. Performance is completely unacceptable. Massive lag and unresponsiveness. They said they would fix it with a software update, but it hasn't come yet.

      Once they fix the software they may start selling it again. But if they can't fix the software it may be dead, although people who already bought one are kind of screwed.

      Hard to know what happened here, Google hardware is usually quite good.

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    6. Re:And this is a surprise how? by Luthair · · Score: 1

      Isn't that true for every company? Microsoft isn't making Windows 95 anymore, Apple isn't making PowerMacs. Oh my god they fucking killed them!

  2. I look forward to the upcoming sales by bobstreo · · Score: 2

    on woot, meh and maybe untilgone

    Lesson learned, never buy any consumer hardware from google. (except maybe the pixel phones)

    It will only end in more unsupported devices, maybe even deliberately bricked by updates taking up space in landfills.

  3. OP2 in the works? by ChunderDownunder · · Score: 1

    Google partnered with Rockchip to rebadge the RK3399 as the 'OP1' SoC blessed for ChromeOS. That design is now 2 years old; if a newer ARM tablet chip is around the corner then I can understand them dumping Celeron.

    (Or maybe it's just the Celery models weren't selling due to dud performance.)

  4. Intel Celeron = doomed now what did they pay amd by Joe_Dragon · · Score: 1

    Intel Celeron = doomed now what did they pay to keep amd out??

  5. Re:Intel Celeron = doomed now what did they pay am by Cmdln+Daco · · Score: 1

    First AMD post on a 'celeron' topic.

    Drink!

  6. Only advertising survives by DogDude · · Score: 1

    The only product that Google continues to develop is their core product: targeted advertising and data mining.

    I wonder why they're so intent on trying to create unrelated products. Why not be happy with the enormous profits from the data mining and advertising, and enjoy the profits? Pay huge dividends if they've got nothing else to invest in.

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    1. Re:Only advertising survives by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      I think it's a pride thing. They don't want to think that they're a one trick pony who had an OK product and just happened to be in the right place when Altavista fumbled the ball.

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    2. Re:Only advertising survives by DogDude · · Score: 1

      You might be right. Still, there's something to be said for doing one thing and doing it well.

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  7. anti-semitic crapflood by astrofurter · · Score: 1

    Has anyone noticed how ANY article that's unflattering to Big Brother Google immediately attracts trolls/shills who crapflood the comments with anti-semitic copypasta? It's almost like the Goog employs a dirty PR firm to spread the entirely misleading idea that opposition to Big Brother Google's policies is based on ugly racism.

  8. So we can write... by LordHighExecutioner · · Score: 2

    GoogleDeadProjects++;

  9. Not surprising, experimental project by SurenEnfiajyan · · Score: 1

    Not surprising. Even Google knew from the beginning that it was an experimental project and had doubts about that model success.

  10. Pixel C by makitso · · Score: 1

    I have had a lot of crap hardware from Google. But, the Pixel C tablet I have now is by far the best tablet I have ever owned.

  11. Re: Google killed off a product? by eminencja · · Score: 1

    Why the antisemitism when discussing a Google product?

    WTF? Is a Shekel worse than a dollar, a pound, or a euro? Since the product was conceived in the US, it makes sense to use Shekels.

  12. Re:related to Intel manufacturing yield problems? by Luthair · · Score: 1

    This was my thought also, its well known that Intel decided to focus production on their expensive CPUs lately. Not surprising that Google, a small time Intel customer would have trouble buying the least expensive CPU.

  13. Can we now revive Android tablets please? by guacamole · · Score: 1

    For a long time I used to think that Android tablet sales and development went down a few years ago because of poor sales. But more recently, it was becoming clear that Android tablet sales went down because Google did a lot to bury Android as a tablet OS.

    Around years 2013-2014, Android tablet development was so exciting that even companies that were never PC or tablet manufacturers jumped into the game (e.g. Nvidia Shield). However, for the last three years or so, Google created and promoted the narrative that "Android is soon to be dead as a tablet OS, but Chrome OS will be our next tablet OS". As result, you can expect the users, developers and OEMs to lose much interest in the family of products that are not supported much by their own OS developer. And they did, although Samsung and Huawei still seem to be doubling up on Android tablet development, each introducing at least new two Android models every year. I can't remember the last time when google introduced a solid new tablet-specific feature in an Android release, even though companies like Samsung always go into extra trouble to add tablet specific mods to their Android version (TouchWiz, Dex, etc). Finally, Google has done pretty much nothing to police or encourage the app developers to produce tablet friendly user interfaces. The least Google could do is for example increase the search rank of the apps that have tablet-specific UI features in the App Store, and downrank the rest.

    So the right thing to do is to go back to Android, and start building it into a viable tablet OS. Reintroduce Android tablets as a part of Nexus or Pixel product line again. But these product needs to fit within a specific market niche. Most people view and Android tablet as a media consumption device, and I think it's stupid to expect that people will pay 600-1000 dollars for one. That's crazy. That's where entry-level business and gaming laptops are priced these days. A nicely spec'd android tablet with a great AMOLED screen and solid internals should be retailing between 350 for base model and 500USD with LTE and all bells included, and the low end models should be priced between 150-300.