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| The Nexus has garnered glowing reviews: Reuters |
Google’s “Nexus 7″ tablet is off to an encouraging start, with major retailers running out of the gadgets as the Internet company’s first entry in an increasingly crowded market showed up in US stores on Friday.
GameStop said on Friday it had already run through its first two allocations
of the tablet, co-developed by Google and Taiwan’s Asustek that starts
at $199 and has drawn glowing reviews from major gadget reviewers.
Sam’s Club, the warehouse chain owned by Wal-Mart Stores Inc, and Staples listed the device as being out of stock on their websites as of Friday. Office Depot’s website continued to offer the device for sale as of the afternoon.
Google
unveiled the 7-inch tablet, which the company hopes will allow it to
better compete against Apple and Amazon.com, and funnel more people into
its trove of online content, at its annual developer conference in San
Francisco at the end of June.
Consumers
have been able to pre-order the tablet from Google and several
retailers in past weeks, and Google said it began shipping devices to
consumers on Friday.
“We blew through the first two allotments,” a GameStop spokesperson said.
A third allotment of preorders will be available in August. The game retailer declined to share exact number of preorders.
The Nexus 7 uses Google’s Android mobile software, which has become the most prevalent operating system for smartphones globally, but has so far failed to make a big splash in the tablet market.
By taking a
greater role in the tablet arena, Google hopes to ensure that its
online services remain front-and-center to consumers, as tablets by
Apple and Amazon are increasingly becoming gateways to the Web and
Web-based content such as movies and music.
Google
executives have been quoted saying that the company will not generate a
profit margin when the Nexus 7 is sold in retail stores. A report by
research firm IHS iSuppli on Wednesday estimated that the bill of
materials for the $199 version of the device, which features 8GB of
flash memory and a high-end Tegra 3 processor by Nvidia Corp, is $152.
Apple
still dominates the market for touch-screen tablet computers with its
two-year old iPad. Amazon.com’s $199 Kindle Fire tablet is based on
open-source Android computer code, but the device features a customized
interface that does not use many Google services.
The Nexus 7 has drawn accolades from reviewers like the Wall Street Journal‘s
Walt Mossberg. Pundits reckon the $199 Nexus 7 may seriously threaten
the same-priced Kindle Fire, especially since Google’s offering has a
camera and a higher-resolution screen.
Google
Executive Chairman Eric Schmidt, speaking to reporters on Thursday at
the Allen & Co conference in Sun Valley, said there was “immense
demand” for the Nexus 7 in the first week after it was introduced.
Shares in the company climbed 1.1 percent to $576.52, buoyed by a broader US market rally.
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