Life is complete.
Really it’s the “…and a dinosaur bone” that sold me on this one.
I can’t wait to get these for the articles.
Let’s talk about all these new tablets. Motorola’s got the Xoom, HP’s going to unveil some WebOS tablets in a few weeks, everyone and their mother is trying to put Android on a device that’s bigger than a smartphone. All of that is great! I love competition.
However, 90% of the tablets you saw at CES will never see the light of day. Companies have their manufacturing partners throw together a reference device or two with their logo on it. If someone sees it at the show and places a bulk order for a few thousand pieces, great! You’ll get it three months after we have cash in hand because we need to build them all.
Those that will come out (like the Xoom) will run the latest version of Android, the first version designed for tablets (called Honeycomb). Honeycomb looks like a tablet OS designed to make you feel cool while using it. Its design direction feels like they thought, “Hey, let’s make the user feel absolutely badass while using it.” And that’s cool! I honestly can’t wait to get my hands on it to give it a try. They did that because they know that the enthusiast market is the one they need to get excited about this product, and enthusiasts know how many choices they have.
Meanwhile, the iPad is going to outsell them all. It isn’t even going to be close. Apple isn’t selling millions of devices to enthusiasts. They’re selling millions of devices to people who aren’t enthusiasts. Some of that is marketing but more of it is good user experience with little fluff. Can you see your grandmother using a tablet with Honeycomb on it? I sure can’t. As far as Apple is concerned, Android can keep their enthusiast market. They’re just a footnote on the market Apple is actually going for.
Geek is a finite market. Grandma is not.
Personally, having a single button that does one thing and one thing only is part of what makes iOS devices so easy to learn to use. Removing that button would make discovering the device, especially for those unfamiliar with multitouch gestures, extremely difficult. Not going to happen.
I read a while ago that Kindles have been a pretty popular option for small aircraft pilots in the cockpit due to their ability to hold huge amounts of maps in a single place. Bringing the iPad into the mix only makes sense. How long before this makes the jump to full commercial airlines?
This is clearly just the beginning of what is going to no doubt be a deluge of educational software available for Apple’s tablet platform.
Vook’s platform for building mixed media content books into an individual app has been gaining some traction lately. Let’s see how the approach catches on with consumers in just two days time.
Following up on a post about Apple’s long history of selling straight to schools, we get the first university announcing they’ll give iPads to every incoming student. Between CourseSmart, iTunes U and other educational resources, it looks like they’ve got the content covered. Looking forward to seeing the feedback on this one!