Posts Tagged ‘latest about ipad’
Win an iPad
Enter our prize draw for the chance to get your hands on an Apple iPad
Analyst calls iPad ‘crushing success’
Message from Five Filters: If you can, please donate to the full-text RSS service so we can continue developing it.
3 seconds ago 2010-06-07T13:06:23-07:00
Five Filters featured article: Into the Abyss. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction.
iPad imitators hope to bite into Apple’s lead
Message from Five Filters: If you can, please donate to the full-text RSS service so we can continue developing it.
HONG KONG (AFP) –
When Apple announced the arrival of the iPad, it said it would create and define a brand-new sector in the market for computer devices, somewhere between the smartphone and the notebook laptop.
Two months and over two million iPad sales later a string of Asian manufacturers have shown they agree — by unveiling their own tablets which they hope will take a bite out of Apple’s lead.
Over a dozen new iPad-style gadgets have now entered the fray, and more are sure to follow.
At the Computex computer trade fair in Taipei this week, beautiful models posed with shiny black slabs of clever glass — most of which looked pretty much the same as Apple’s iPad.
First out of the box was the catchily named ASUS Eee Pad 101TC. It’s similar in size to the iPad, runs on Windows and will sell for 399 US dollars — around 100 US dollars less than the US price of a basic iPad.
The MSI WindPad 100, which at 499 US dollars costs the same as the iPad, also runs on Windows and boasts a webcam — which is conspicuously absent in the first iPad models. LG’s new UX10 device also has a webcam.
Many newcomers will also use Adobe’s Flash video technology, another perceived flaw in the iPad. Apple refused to allow Flash on its new gadget.
Taiwan-based chipmaker VIA believes the way forward in the tablet market is to go smaller and cheaper.
Its VIA Slate prototype has a seven-inch screen, runs on an old version of Google‘s Android operating system and will retail for between 100 and 200 US dollars. Several other tablet devices will also run on Android.
Right at the bottom of the market is the iPed — which seems to be a direct copy of the iPad, even down to the packaging. It is on sale only over the Taiwan Strait in China, selling in a Shenzhen computer mall for 105 dollars.
Nancy Liu of Taiwan’s Industrial Technology Research Institute told AFP that companies launching their tablets at Computex wanted to prove “they have the capability to catch the trend set by Apple.”
“I don’t think the followers are capable of dethroning Apple’s leadership at least in the short term,” Liu said.
But it’s not the gadget, it’s what you can do with it that counts. And this is where Apple is also streets ahead of the pack. As Jenny Lai, a Taipei-based technology analyst for brokerage firm CLSA, says: content is king.
“Content remains a critical part of the success story for iPad,” she said. “Currently, there are seven major app stores including new entrants Lenovo and Asustek.
“What?s more important for Apple and existing vendors is building up a more user-friendly interface and more choices for online-store users.”
Apple has more than 100,000 downloadable applications compared to the 500 it offered for the iPhone when it first opened online less than two years ago. Google has more than 30,000 apps available for Android.
Lenovo’s application download store for Lephone and other products has around 250 applications. Asustek say it is cooperating with Intel and Microsoft to launch an app store in 2010 on a Windows platform.
And it’s not just computer makers watching each other’s reaction to this “new” market — the struggling old school publishing industries are also looking on in hope.
The tablet computer plus its slightly less glamorous cousin, the e-reader, have been hailed as the saviour of the book and newspaper industries.
Sony, which has an e-reader but does not have a tablet computer on the market — yet — predicts big changes for the publishing industry on the back of the launch of all these devices.
Steve Haber, president of Sony?s digital reading business division, believes the printed book will soon be overtaken by its electronic sister, the same pattern seen with music and photography.
“Within five years there will be more digital content sold than physical content,” he told the Daily Telegraph newspaper.
“I have multiple meetings with publishers and tell them paradigm shifts happen. You can say fortunately or unfortunately you haven’t had a paradigm shift in, what, hundreds of years.
“We in the consumer electronics area have a paradigm shift every year or two.”
Five Filters featured article: Into the Abyss. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction.
Aussie diners eat up Apple’s iPad — as menu
Message from Five Filters: If you can, please donate to the full-text RSS service so we can continue developing it.
21 seconds ago 2010-06-04T12:02:26-07:00
Five Filters featured article: Into the Abyss. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction.
Five Reasons iPad Should Fear an Android Invasion
Message from Five Filters: If you can, please donate to the full-text RSS service so we can continue developing it.
One of the prevailing themes at the Computex conference this week is the coming onslaught of Android-based tablets. The iPad is leading the tablet charge–selling more than two million units in less than two months since its initial launch, but some of the Android tablets could be formidable challengers to Apple’s de facto tablet dominance.
Let’s take a look at five things that may make Android-based tablets better business tools, and better mobile computing platforms for business professionals than the Apple iPad. These factors should be cause for Apple to be concerned about the Android invasion.
1. True Multitasking. The iPad and Android-based tablets are each built on a smartphone mobile OS foundation, but a tablet is not a smartphone. The larger form factor and unique functionality of the tablet demand a multitasking interface capable of running apps in the background.
Apple has unveiled that iPhone OS 4.0 will include multitasking, but it is still a limited multitasking approach built around specific scenarios and APIs. Google’s Android OS provides true multitasking.
2. Less Restrictive App Market. Apple boasts nearly 200,000 apps, so there is certainly no shortage of utilities for the iPhone and iPad platforms. However, Apple has an arcane and strict approval process that many developers find frustrating.
What angers developers even more is when Apple changes the rules after the fact and removes previously-approved apps from the app store. Developers are not as likely to invest significant time and effort creating apps that Apple may or may not approve, and may subsequently ban even after they’re approved.
3. Adobe Flash. Do I even need to say anymore? The battle between Apple and Adobe over the exclusion of the ubiquitous Flash technology from the iPhone and iPad platforms is as public as it is heated.
There are passionate views on both sides, and there are some valid points for why Apple wants to avoid Flash. Still, Flash is popular and forms the backbone of much of the content currently on the Web, so Flash compatibility stands out as a defining feature of non-iPad tablets.
4. Hardware Diversity. Variety is the spice of life. One person may think that a 9-inch tablet is perfect, while another may feel it’s too bulky and opt for the smaller Dell Streak. The thickness and weight of the tablet may be the most important factors to one person, while the next person may be willing to trade some size and weight for more storage capacity, or more USB or SD memory card ports.
The iPad is the iPad. You can choose 3G, or not 3G, and what storage capacity you want, but there is really only one hardware platform to choose from. Android tablets will provide business professionals with a wide variety of form factors and features to meet their unique needs and preferences.
5. Carrier Diversity. Like the hardware platform, businesses and business professionals also need options when it comes to the carrier providing wireless connectivity for the device. The Apple iPad, like the Apple iPhone, is locked in to AT&T. Business professionals that do not wish to do business with AT&T, or are already engaged in a long-term wireless contract with a competing carrier may be reluctant to activate service with AT&T.
The recent changes eliminating unlimited data plans for the iPad–unveiled only two months after the iPad was launched, might also turn some users off. Android tablets may be offered from a variety of carriers, giving businesses some choice in determining the provider with the best coverage, or best pricing, to meet their needs.
The iPad has a significant headstart. Most of the Android tablets will not hit the street until later this year. If Apple maintains its current pace and continues to march toward selling 10 million iPads in 2010, there will be nearly 10 million tablet customers that will already be invested in Apple.
Many business professionals will hold out, though. Either they don’t like Apple, or they don’t like AT&T, or they simply feel the iPad doesn’t meet their needs. Apple should be concerned about the Android invasion, and aggressively working to develop an iPad 2.0 that incorporates at least some of these features, and includes some innovations to raise the bar and continue to blaze new tablet trails.
You can follow Tony on his Facebook page
, or contact him by email at tony_bradley@pcworld.com
. He also tweets as @Tony_BradleyPCW
.
Five Filters featured article: Into the Abyss. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction.
Publishers see signs the iPad can restore ad money
Message from Five Filters: If you can, please donate to the full-text RSS service so we can continue developing it.
(06-03) 11:31 PDT New York (AP) –
Good news for the news business: Companies are paying newspapers and magazines up to five times as much to place ads in their iPad applications as what similar advertising costs on regular websites.
This doesn’t mean Apple’s tablet computer will live up to its hype as a potential lifeline for the media industry. Online ads still generate a small fraction of news companies’ advertising revenue, and it’s an open question whether print ads will return to what they totaled before the recession.
But early evidence suggests the iPad is at least offering publishers a way to get more money out of advertisers. That bolsters the hope that portable touch-screen computers could start turning the economics of digital advertising in publishers’ favor.
“I think it will redefine publishing and also redefine how advertisers connect with our audience,” said Lou Cona, executive vice president at Conde Nast Media Group, the privately held publisher of such magazines as Vogue, GQ and Wired.
Still, a lot will need to go right for publishers before the iPad and imitator tablet computers become a significant source of income.
For one thing, media applications will have to be compelling enough to keep people engaged for longer periods. That’s especially true if a publisher wants to charge for a news app, because free articles on the Web are just a few taps away on the iPad’s browser. Expect media companies to hold back more material from their free websites and offer it exclusively in tablet apps.
Also, tablet computers will have to get into many more readers’ hands — but without becoming so mundane that advertisers are no longer willing to pay a premium for what now is rarefied space.
There are many reasons publishers don’t make as much online as in print. While newspapers and magazines offer a limited supply of ad space — the number of pages they publish — space online is virtually limitless. Advertisers that don’t want to pay full price can give their money to online ad networks, which get discounted rates on slots publishers can’t sell on their own.
That supply/demand equation hasn’t played out yet on the iPad. In iPad applications such as USA Today’s, there is a finite amount of space and no ad networks are in the mix. And the app gives advertisers new possibilities. A reader can click on Courtyard by Marriott’s USA Today ad and then with a flick of a finger scroll through images of the hotels’ updated lobby design. Another tap and a high-definition video appears, full of happy hotel guests.
Jason Fulmines, director of mobile products for USA Today’s corporate parent, Gannett Co., says the newspaper is charging Marriott about $50 for every thousand times, or impressions, the ad appears. The average rate for USA Today’s regular Web site is less than $10, he said. In the printed newspaper, the cost per thousand impressions on a full-page color ad that runs nationally is $103.
Fulmines declined to say how many impressions USA Today is promising on the iPad or how much ad revenue it projects from the iPad this year.
The newspaper’s markup on iPad ads appears to be common. Phuc Truong, managing director of the mobile marketing company Mobext U.S., said publishers have been asking two to four times the usual rate of online advertising.
Aside from paying higher rates for each iPad ad, advertisers have been willing to increase their overall spending with a given publication. That has been the case at The Wall Street Journal, said Brian Quinn, the Journal’s vice president and general manager for digital ad sales.
“Out of the gate, there was an exuberance about this,” he said.
There is no guarantee publishers can keep this going. For instance, one reason JPMorgan Chase & Co. leapt at the chance to sponsor The New York Times’ app for the first 60 days was the opportunity to showcase its Sapphire credit card to early buyers of the device. That card is aimed at the top 15 percent of earners, and people who bought the iPad (for $499, at least) presumably have extra cash.
Chase is impressed by what it’s seen on the iPad, but for reasons that cut both ways for publishers.
The good news, according to Chase Sapphire General Manager Sean O’Reilly, is that the company’s ad is getting clicked on about 15 percent of the time that it pops up. Even if that’s partly because people are fumbling with the touch-screen navigation, it’s a surprisingly high figure; the average “click-though” rate for an online display ad is about one-tenth of a percentage point. Put another way, 84 percent of people never click on a Web ad in an average month, according to Gian Fulgoni, chairman of comScore Inc., a company that analyzes Internet behavior.
The trouble is that some publishers hope the iPad will help break advertisers’ addiction to concrete metrics like this.
Online, advertisers have been ruthless about seeing a return on their money. They have thrown out an industry maxim, “I waste half the money I spend on advertising, I just don’t know which half.” Companies gather information on every step of the process, from the moment someone clicks on an ad to the point of purchase. They don’t want to shell out for ads that don’t pay off.
Publishers, on the other hand, want to return to the days when advertisers paid high prices for a big, eye-grabbing color ad in a newspaper or magazine that readers spent a lot of time with.
Conde Nast says the average reader spends 60 minutes with each monthly issue of its magazines’ iPad apps. The average visitor on the Web spends just 2.1 minutes per month at Vanityfair.com and 3.8 minutes per month at GQ.com, according to comScore. “We’re looking to prove engagement in terms of hours, not minutes,” said Scott Dadich, creative director for Wired magazine.
That could require a new way of measuring how well ads work. Advertisers would have to agree to follow more complex measurements, such as new tools from comScore that don’t just watch how many people click on an ad. Instead comScore offers to show whether customers who have seen an ad then did a Google search for the product or bought it at a store. ComScore gathers such offline data by studying panels of Web users and cross-referencing them with databases of say, loyalty card activity at a grocery store.
“The click is just not a metric that reflects the effectiveness of the advertising,” Fulgoni said.
Among the other hopeful signs for publishers: The New York Times says 300,000 people had downloaded the newspaper’s free app by mid-May. Around that time Apple said it had sold about 1 million iPads since their April 3 debut, meaning more than a quarter of early iPad buyers were at least curious enough to take a look at the Times’ app. (That percentage is likely to drop; Apple now says it has sold 2 million iPads.)
Wired might be the most aggressive magazine in trying to push the iPad’s potential. Wired’s app lets readers peruse the magazine the way they would in print, but with extra touches such as video clips or graphics that can be rotated with a finger swipe. Nissan, which has a 30-second TV-style commercial for the Infiniti in Wired’s first iPad edition, is one of nine advertisers that generally place spots in the print edition and are taking advantage of these bells and whistles in the tablet app.
Wired’s app costs $4.99 per issue, which brings up another wild card: Whether publishers can balance methods of seeking revenue from readers and advertisers.
On the Web most content is given away, in hopes of luring the widest possible audience for advertisers. Publishers are eager to avoid repeating that on tablets, but charging for apps carries its own risks. There might not be enough readers willing to pay, which would reduce the audience that can be sold to advertisers.
Wired says its first effort is working out. By Wednesday, just one week after the app went on sale, more than 66,000 people had paid for it. In an average month, the printed magazine sells 82,000 copies on newsstands.
Five Filters featured article: Into the Abyss. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction.
Apple’s iPad Flooded By Demand
Message from Five Filters: If you can, please donate to the full-text RSS service so we can continue developing it.
Apple announced on Monday that its iPad passed the 2 million mark in sales in less than two months since its release on April 3, although the milestone could have come sooner had the company anticipated the strength of consumer demand for its latest gadget.
The announcement comes just after Apple
(
AAPL -
news
-
people
) began shipping the iPad in Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Spain, Switzerland and the U.K. It will also be available in nine more countries in July and additional countries later in 2010.
“Considering the significant supply constraints, they probably would have hit [2 million sold] earlier,” says Andy Hargreaves, an analyst at Pacific Crest Securities. “But given the supply and pace of sales, this is about what we would have expected.”
That wasn’t always the case, as Hargreaves, along with many others, was skeptical about demand before the iPad’s release. But that was then, and now he sees a very strong future for the product. “I think the momentum being seen in the iPad can certainly continue through the rest of the year,” Hargreaves says. “As you get into 2011 and the market becomes more competitive and people have a broader concept of what the product is, we’ll have to see.”
In Apple’s announcement Chief Executive Steve Jobs said he appreciates customer patience and that Apple is working hard to build enough iPads for everyone. Investors should expect to see iPad sales impact the company’s bottom-line immediately. “It’s a profitable product out of the gate, though it’s not up to the corporate average of about 40% gross margins and around 29% operating profit,” Hargreaves says.
Shares of Apple managed to maintain their gains despite the down market, closing the day with an increase of 1.5%, or $3.92, to $260.80. The rest of the technology sector was mixed though, as Hewlett-Packard
(
HPQ -
news
-
people
)slipped 0.9%, while Microsoft
(
MSFT -
news
-
people
)edged up 0.3%. Dell
(
DELL -
news
-
people
)fell 1.8% and Google
(
GOOG -
news
-
people
)decreased 0.7%. Since the beginning of the year Apple has seen its stock rise 24.7%.
After Apple sold 1 million iPads, Hargreaves noted that much of the consumer base included an older crowd, whose lifestyles are more conducive to the larger device rather than its pocket-size counterparts, the iPhone and iPod touch. (See “For Apple, A Million iPads Is Just The Start.”) He adds, though, that there has been a greater amount of business demand than he would have expected.
“Businesses have the standard desktop and notebook for all travel services, but people are augmenting those with the iPad for short trips and day trips, and finding value in carrying them around to all kinds of meetings,” Hargreaves says.
Separately, Adobe Systems
(
ADBE -
news
-
people
) said Tuesday that it launched a new digital viewer technology, available as none other than an application through the iTunes store. (See“Adobe Hangs One On The The Apple Tree.”)
The app allows magazine publishers to produce impressive digital versions of their magazines. The announcement after the two companies were making headlines over feuds centering on open platforms and the use of Flash technology. (See “Adobe Responds To Steve Jobs’ Flash Attack.”)
Five Filters featured article: Into the Abyss. Available tools: PDF Newspaper, Full Text RSS, Term Extraction.
del.icio.us
Digg It!
yahoo
Facebook
Reddit
rss









Twitter
Facebook