Google will sell its first tablet from mid-July for $199
San Francisco: Google will sell its first tablet from mid-July for $199, hoping to replicate its smartphone success in a hotly contested market now dominated by Amazon’s Kindle Fire
and Apple’s iPad.
Google
hopes its maiden entry in the tablet market, which will also see the
advent of Microsoft Corp’s Surface this year, will accelerate
development of tablet-specific applications for its Android operating
software and help it make headway against rival gadgets.
The “Nexus 7″ tablet, built by and co-branded with Taiwan’s Asus (2357.TW), was one of several gadgets unveiled at its annual developers’ conference on Wednesday, as the Internet search and advertising leader dips its toe into the intensively competitive consumer arena.
Google
co-founder Sergey Brin demonstrated Google Glass, a futuristic-looking
eye-glass-computer that can live-stream events, record, and perform
computing tasks. The device will be available to US-based developers for
$1,500.
And it
unveiled the Nexus Q — a $300 device with a built-in amplifier that lets
users stream content from Android devices onto their TVs.
But the
Nexus tablet hogged the spotlight. Sold initially only on the Google
Play online store, its $199 price tag and 7-inch stature is aimed
squarely at the Fire, but the Nexus has a front-facing camera while
Amazon’s tablet does not.
Analysts consider the Fire a window into Amazon.com’s trove of online content rather than an iPad rival, given the $499 that Apple asks for a device with a “retina” display that far outstrips it in terms of resolution.
Google can
similarly use the Nexus 7 to connect to its own online offerings, which
include YouTube and Google Play. It will go after more cost-conscious
users who might shun the pricier iPad.
“They all but called it a Kindle Fire killer. They’re clearly gunning for that No. 2 spot behind Apple’s iPad that is currently occupied by Kindle,” said Altimeter Group analyst Chris Silva. “But the con is they do not yet have a footprint in people’s minds and wallets as the go-to place to purchase and consume media.”
JELLY BEANS
Shares in Google gained 0.8 percent to $569.37 in afternoon trade.
The Nexus
will feature the new 4.1 “Jelly Bean” version of Google’s software, as
well as a front-facing camera, a 1280×800 resolution screen, and an
Nvidia (NVDA.O) Tegra 3 processor.
Google’s Android software is the No. 1 operating system for smartphones, with about 1 million Android devices getting activated every day
But it has
struggled to compete with Apple’s iPad in the market for tablets,
largely because it lags far behind Apple and Amazon in terms of
available content and tablet-specific applications, such as games.
Executives showcased the new 4.1 “Jelly Bean” version of Android operating system on Wednesday. The new software delivers faster performance, according to the company, and new features such as “voice search.”
“That range of services will be the secret to stitching
together this rag-tag fleet of Android gadgets into a platform that can
compete with Apple for minutes of users’ attention rather than premium
device dollars,” said Forrester analyst James McQuivey.
The
tablet’s limited availability — executives said they had no plans yet to
expand distribution beyond Google’s own site — may curtail initial
sales growth.
Google
briefly sold a specially designed Android smartphone – the Nexus One –
directly to consumers in 2010, but closed the online store after four
months saying it had not lived up to expectations.
But it’s
the lack of “native” applications — software designed with a larger
tablet in mind, rather than ported from smartphones — that is the Nexus’
biggest impediment for now.
“Unless
you have a strong app offering, for a consumer it is a piece of glass
that does what a phone does on a larger screen,” Carolina Milanesi,
analyst at Gartner Research.
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