Jobs hated the idea of an iPad mini but the rumors have not stopped: AFP
Apple generates more gossip than the British royal family.
There’s a
constantly spinning mill of rumors about Apple products, most of which
turn out to be untrue. What’s unusual this week is that talk has revived
of a smaller iPad model, an idea company founder Steve Jobs derided publicly a year before he died.
Apple
and its suppliers aren’t commenting. Rumors of a smaller iPad, or “iPad
mini” have percolated ever since the first iPad was launched two years
ago. This time around, they’re fed by media reports from South Korea,
China and Taiwan, saying Apple has ordered Samsung screens that are
7.86 inches measured on the diagonal. That would make for a screen about
two-thirds the size of the current iPad, which has a diagonal measurement of 9.7 inches.
Why it’s a good idea: A smaller tablet would help Apple further its lead in the tablet market.
“From a competitive standpoint, we believe an iPad mini with a lower price
point would be the competition’s worst nightmare, says Shaw Wu, an
analyst at Sterne Agee. “Most (competitors) already have a tough enough
time competing against the iPad 2, as well as the new iPad.”
Apple has
successfully fended off competitors who have tried to sell tablets in
iPad’s size range. But last year, Amazon.com Inc. figured out how to
crack Apple’s stranglehold on tablets by making a half-size, no-frills
tablet. The result was the Kindle Fire, which sells for $199 —basically,
the cost of production. Amazon has sold millions of them.
Apple
sells the iPod Touch for $199, but its screen is about a quarter of the
size of the Kindle Fire — a big disadvantage for people who want to
enjoy books, movies and games. It also sells the older iPad model for
$399. It has nothing in between.
Price
isn’t the only reason customers might prefer a smaller tablet. A 7-inch
model would fit in many handbags, unlike the current iPad.
Wu says
he’s seen evidence of Apple experimenting with both smaller and larger
tablet screens since 2009, and doesn’t sense that the release of an iPad
mini is “imminent.”
What it might cost: It could be hard for Apple to make money
from an iPad-quality 7-inch (18-centimeter) tablet that sells for $299.
Analysts at IHS iSuppli estimate that a smaller tablet would cost
around $250 to produce, a figure that doesn’t include development costs,
packaging or patent royalties. That suggests Apple would price it at $329 or $349.
“The first
thing you always have to keep in mind is: Apple is not going to sell an
unprofitable product,” says Rhoda Alexander at iSuppli.
Why it’s a bad idea: A smaller iPad would be a headache for software developers.
“Going to a different screen size ends up being a ton of work,” says Nate Weiner, the creator of Pocket, an application
that stores Web pages and other material for later reading. “If you
take, for an example, an interface built for the iPad and try to cram it
into the Kindle Fire, it just doesn’t fit,” he says.
However,
developers who have already adapted their programs to the Kindle Fire or
other 7-inch tablets wouldn’t face a big hurdle in adapting to a third
Apple screen size, Weiner says.
What Jobs thought: Apple’s late CEO made a rare appearance on an October 2010 earnings conference call
to launch a tirade against the 7-inch tablet Samsung Electronics Inc.
was set to launch as the first major challenger to the iPad.
“The
reason we wouldn’t make a 7-inch tablet isn’t because we don’t want to
hit a price point, it’s because we don’t think you can make a great
tablet with a 7-inch screen,” Jobs said. “The 7-inch tablets are
tweeners, too big to compete with a smartphone and too small to compete
with an iPad.”
He said
the resolution of the display could be increased to make up for the
smaller size, but that would be “meaningless, unless your tablet also
includes sandpaper, so that the user can sand down their fingers to
around one quarter of the present size.”
“There are
clear limits of how close you can physically place elements on a touch
screen before users cannot reliably tap, flick or pinch them. This is
one of the key reasons we think the 10-inch (25-centimeter) screen size is the minimum size required to create great tablet apps,” he said.
Jobs
failed to mention Apple’s success developing apps that use taps, flicks
and pinches on the iPhone, with its 3.5-inch (8.9-centimeter)screen.
Loading














0 comments:
Post a Comment