Sluggish Android Tablet Growth May Give Microsoft an Opening 269
theodp writes "In NASCAR, you can finish a race in the Top 3 by leading the whole way or by having spectacular crashes take out those ahead of you. The same may hold true for the tablet race, where Apple has led the whole way, but Microsoft could advance into 2nd or 3rd place as those once ahead of it crash and burn. 'Microsoft tablets based on Windows 8 won't be ready until next year,' notes SplatF's Dan Frommer. 'Unexpectedly, that might not be too late to matter.' Far-fetched as it may seem, Ars Technica's Peter Bright explains why the Windows 8 tablet invasion might work."
Seriously? (Score:4, Insightful)
Could we see something similar in 2012 between 'Jean Girard' Jobs and 'Ricky Bobby' Ballmer?
No. 2012 is not the year that the final decision on tablets will be made. Just a little insight for ya', but Android is not going to sit idly by and wait a few years before finding and growing their niche in the tablet market. That kind of strategy may work for companies that think they can't fail because they have a large enough war chest to survive a war of competitive attrition, but Android isn't a sloth-like, relatively static codebase that's hoping others die before stepping in. And let's not forget that given another year Apple will have their next iPad on the market (and who knows what else). Apple is trying to create dependancies between its phone, tablet and entertainment products much the same way that MS made Windows + Office a dominant combination. Until MS can enter the market with strong ties and motivation for users to buy multiple MS phones, tablets and other entertainment products they will not be "racing to the finish line" with Apple, Android and whoever else jumps into the marketplace.
Re:Seriously? (Score:4, Insightful)
There is one thing that Microsoft frequently gets right that Google can learn from - Developers! Developers! Developers. I did bitch and moan about this (and no doubt will continue to do so) on my blog (see sig if you're *really* interested).
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Android tablets have taken twenty percent of the market from Apple. That is not sluggish. Android phones are being activated at over 600,000 a day. Microsoft makes more on extortion from companies that create android devices than they do on their own phone/tablet sales.
Windows 8 has far too many consumer hostile drm features. Let's not forget that upgrading to Windows 8 is not necessary, and vendors have been veering away from Microsoft's offerings for tablets. Both Apple and Google are many times
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Android tablets have taken twenty percent of the market from Apple
By shipments or by sales? Big difference.
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No, iPads are around the same price as the Android tablets.
Unless you count cheap, plastic, resistive-screen Chinese jobs running (nay, walking) Android 1.6 or 1.7 as "Android tablets".
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The Acer Iconia is $399. 10 inch, dual core, fast, Honeycomb, etc. Ipad2 starts at $499. Sure, that's only a $100 difference, but that's a real difference to a lot of people.
We're probably going to see a $350-$299 Honeycomb dualcore tablets by Xmas, which will be on par with the current ipad2 and be behind the rumored ipad3. I think $299 is the magic price point where Joe Casual will blow some cash on one. That's my own personal price point and consider $299 for a Honeycomb table to be a reasonable purchas
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This iPad I'm holdi
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Your companies sales reps probably hate the tablets
I'm sorry the reps you've dealt with are having such a hard time. And you're right, it is always possible that mine are blowing smoke when they say they like our system. Consider this though, our tablets are completely optional. We still print paper catalogs, and accept faxed in orders. We have to keep that legacy system since we work with independent sales group companies, we have a website that is actually slightly more up to date (24 hours) than what is on the tablet, and we have an FTP server that hos
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Total bullshit.
More likely they can't express how much, in words, that they like them, even for sales reps.
You have no clue how easy it is to show what you are doing to someone watching on one, nor how bad it used to be to drag around a huge laptop while trying to find a spot to set the boat anchor down just to demo something.
And tablets are very fast. They are also buggy, every one, but still highly useable.
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I never see people sitting outdoors using them. I never see people using them while eating lunch or drinking coffee. I never see people using them at my workplace. I never see people using them at the offices of the other companies I visit.
Just guessing, but is braille a significant part of your life?
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Tablets are too expensive.
That should explain why, for the most part. People don't know that they exist. If it wasn't for sites like slashdot I'd not know either.
Ask those around you about why they have not chosen to buy one.
I own two tablets. I use them every day. But I search for other things to do with them. The software just isn't there. Lack of software and high costs are the major stumbling blocks to adoption.
A buddy bought one shortly after I did. Turns out he bought one for his wife also.
W
Eee Pad (Score:2)
I use the Eee Pad instead of a laptop or netbook.
With the dock, it's a fully functional Android netbook with an actual keyboard and extended battery life. Take it out of the dock, it's a tablet with a multi touch touch screen, and here's the big difference with an ordinary netbook: it goes about a full day of use or a week of casual use between recharges.
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People buying them does not mean they're using them. I have one (8" Android 2.2, with an excellent 1280x768 capacitive screen), and barely use it. My dilemma is whether to double down and get a better one, or just give up on it. My tablet is not so much competing vs my netbook, as vs my HTC HD2. The 4.3" screen is big enough for ereading (except pdfs), mail and keeping up to date with rss feeds.
So the tablet is justified only for browsing, reading comics, and reading pdfs and docs. I've bought QuickOffice t
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Plus, when I'm home, not being able to access content directly off my NAS is a pain (I'm supposed to FTP it over, then play it, or drag and drop it, or put it on an SD card or USB key... that's too cumbersome... I've got a NAS, if've got wifi... talk ! In the end, I'm still using my netbook for that...).
There are quite a few Android apps that allow you to browse filesystems over WiFi. I don't know if any of them work with your tablet/NAS/filesystem combo, but you could try.
If all else fails, you could run a web server on your NAS. It's clumsy, but it should allow you easy access to the content.
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I've tried a couple. My tablet is missing a component for samba or NFS access, and its not on xda, so indeed it must be FTP or HTTP download, which is as cumbersome a drag and drop from my PC. I'm guessing a 1st-tier tablet wouldn't have that issue.
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If you're on a 2.2 device using it as a tablet then, yes, there are superior experiences to be had. For you, I'd suggest the Asus Transformer with dock. 16 hours of
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People buying them does not mean they're using them. I have one (8" Android 2.2, with an excellent 1280x768 capacitive screen), and barely use it. My dilemma is whether to double down and get a better one, or just give up on it. My tablet is not so much competing vs my netbook, as vs my HTC HD2.
Unfortunately, I totally agree. I have a Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1. It's one of the better Android tablets out there, but I really haven't found a way to fit it into my daily workflow. It's too big to have it on my person at all times, and it's WiFi only, so it doesn't really work in a public transit situation. Plus it runs the same OS as my phone, so I end up installing the things I need on my phone instead of the tablet. In fact, when The Economist launched its Android app a few weeks ago, it didn't support
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Just like all those people who bought computers in the beginning "to index their recipes."
"Wouldn't it be neat to surf the web while watching TV?" becomes "Gee, I'm not really enjoying either of them all that much now since they both compete for my attention."
I've seen exactly one person using one - and that was on the subway. He looked uncomfortable trying to
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I bought a nook color. small enough to carry large enough to read easily, even though I am all apple computer at home.
My Nook gets recharged every 3-4 days. I primarily use it at work. not for work but when I am on my break I can use the open wireless connection for sales to access the internet without going through the corporate firewall/restrictions. I can surf or just read in general.
it also sits on my desk while gaming. I can open a website, or other information on the game while playing to quickl
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But with the Nook Color, people figured out that e-Readers were also tablet computers.
No, the Nook Color is a low-end tablet PC, which is why it costs $250, has a crappy LCD screen and only a few hours of battery life.
Real e-readers like the Kindle are much cheaper, have better screens for ebook reading (I'd rather be able to read the book in sunlight than have a color display), and vastly superior battery life.
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Your question would have more credibility if it ended "Posted from my iPad" or "Posted from my Xoom!" or whatever.
I only know one person who's bought a tablet-style computer (a real computer, not a tablet, but a portable computer with a touch screen and detachable keyboard). It's not even on the radar for most people. They have a computer kicking around somewhere, and that's their v
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What people really want is a laptop-sized tablet with all the electronics built into the screen, a flip-down stand, a remote, a detachable or blutooth keyboard and mouse, a full operating system, and the ability to plug in a second display to stretch the desktop, so they can treat it like any other computer when they want to, or use the touch screen when that's all they need to use is a "tablet computer".
that device has been on the market for decades in various iterations and been a spectacular failure to consumers. The iPad came out and has completely dominated the tablet space by being precisely the opposite of what you outline here. I think you are confusing what us geeks want with what the other 99 percent of people will actually buy.
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What I described needed significant advances in hardware to actually be useable. One of my friends, who is far from being a geek (he won't even buy a cell phone) just bought a real tablet computer, complete with touchscreen, detachable keyboard and stylus, and he loves it. He would never buy an iPad or even an android-based tablet computer. He wants to be able to run "real software." Just like the majority of the population (or t
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A tablet is fine for very light use. Generally these are the people for whom you wonder why they even bother with a PC to begin with. These people are the real market for tablets. They are the people for which a PC is not really the right device.
The need a scooter rather than a real car.
A PC is not a truck. It's a sedan and a tablet is a scooter.
Best for Task requires device with choice (Score:2)
You buy your Apple ties between products and five of the same phone and I'll pick the best product for the task instead.
Why is that not the device with the widest range of applications to perform the task?
In the end software trumps hardware.
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Because only 1% of all apps are any good. The rest are just there. There are only a few categories of usefulness. With a walled garden you suffer this more. Android would have fewer apps but its' open nature allows innovation outside the box. It allows for more complete and useful apps. A closed garden where the warden disallows based on arbitrary criteria kills like a parasite. In other words you can't duplicate features so your whole app is outright denied, even if that duplication is superior t
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Thank you kind fandroid!
Oh, so sorry, but I am not a 'fandroid'. I don't own any Android devices, but I do have an iPhone and a Mac.
As a consultant I need to be informed about what's going on in the 'digital world'. Ignoring Android is not a realistic point of view.
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Ignoring Android tablets is probably ok for this year though.
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Or they're not and it's a waste of time & energy. Android tablets don't have the same sales reach as Android phones - there's just a LOT fewer retail outlets.
Forecasting the future either way can be costly.
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Windows 8 - the new "Hail Mary" (Score:5, Insightful)
Even Microsofties are now saying "Wait for the unified world of WP8".
In the meantime, Apple continues to sell every tablet they can make, no discounting.
And Android smartphones outsell everyone else.
The "Unified world" will be a divided one - Android smartphones and tablets, and Apple smartphones and tablets. There is no room for a #3 (just like on the desktop, or we would have had a "year of the linux desktop" already) unless you consider < 1% to be "success".
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Face it, without the requirement to run WIN32 apps, Windows has no built-in market. Unless Microsoft wants to give it away for a pittance, Windows 8 won't be able to compete with Android tablets, let alone iPads. Who's gonna pay an extra hundred bucks for the MS OS on top of their hardware. I imagine Microsoft will somehow make it so you can't run the tablet version on any other hardware, so they're free to give it away without cannibalizing their desktop profits, but still...
Maybe if they can convince e
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How many people are saying they'll wait for the HP touchpad to go down to $100 - $200 and wipe down WebOS (which runs atop linux anyway) and run a distro all by itself? Check the comments in yesterdays story - they're there.
A nice big tablet display, with detachable keyboard and mouse, running a real OS directly, and not something that has been stripped down for the smaller tablet display, or imposes a "smartphone
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How many people were disappointed when they found the iPad wouldnt be running Darwin? Lots.
Really? REALLY?
Try virtually none. Most people who are interested in an iPad don't even know what Darwin is.
All things being equal, a tablet able to optionally run a full PC OS might be a great competitor to an iPad. But all things won't be equal. That ability will up your hardware requirements to the point that price and battery life will not be comparable. And by the time MS gets one out, it will not be competing with iPads, it will be competing with macbook airs that offer the OS X version of the sa
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I've had a long list of tablets over the years. I have a Tab 10.1 that I picked up the first week it was out.
It's completely nonsense. If Microsoft can get an x86 tablet with 10 hour battery life out next year--it's going to wipe the floor with android.
Android: sometimes kind of supports thumb drives, printers etc. It sometimes kind of plays back a variety of video formats well. It sometimes kind of supports word, excel and editable pdfs. It sometimes kind of has a stripped down application you
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Meh. Microsoft's strategy has always been to claim that the next version will solve all problems, just wait for it and see, Many times they have touted the mythological next version to have all kinds of great improvements.
But far too often have they failed to deliver on their promises. Everything from Chicago (Windows 95) onward has been over promising and under delivering.
Microsoft has a problem delivering on it's promises. Apple never promises anything, but it often actually delivers. And not just stuff t
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"The "Unified world" will be a divided one - Android smartphones and tablets, and Apple smartphones and tablets. There is no room for a #3 (just like on the desktop, or we would have had a "year of the linux desktop" already) unless you consider 1% to be "success"."
And it's not really divided like the desktop world was. For every iOS app there's almost always and Android version. There's not really any document compatibility issues between the two that I know of (both can use PDFs, etc) like there is in
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Do you mean Win8?
Let me tell you one thing that Win8 will be able to do that none of the existing tables can: run desktop software. Not x86 software (note: Win32 != x86... it's an API - you can take Win32 and recompile for ARM), but desktop software. Think MS Office. Think Outlook. Even those two would already be a big deal for quite a few deal.
Why would you want to run Office on a touch tablet? You wouldn't, but it's a whole different kettle of fish when you also have a keyboard dock and touchpad or mouse.
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Symbian and WM were developed for the regular mobile phone market - before smartphones existed, and before IOS existed. Attempts to "bolt on" smartphone functionality have failed in the one place it counts - with the consumer, so there never was room for that big a number "n" in either the smartphone or tablet space.
Witness the failure, now going on 20 years, of Microsofts' tablets. Microsoft has been in the tab
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What on earth are you talking about? A mobile phone running a general-purpose embedded OS such as Windows Mobile or Symbian is a smartphone.
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What next - calling an etch-a-sketch a tablet? :-)
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Those crappy devices are still smartphones, in the same way that Model Ts are still cars.
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So start producing and selling Model T's as cars. Let me know when you get one to be considered an automobile that I can walk into the DMV and plate with no restrictions.
Abraham Lincoln once said "If we call a tail a paw, how many paws does a dog have." When people said "5", he replied "Calling it a paw doesn't make it one." Those crappy phones were not smartphones.
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> As far as tablets go, there has yet to be a well designed third option.
You might be right. I actually *hope* you're right, because that gives us more choices and lower prices. But Microsoft has pissed in their bed with "Windows Tablet Edition" and "Windows CE" and "Windows Mobile" and there really isn't a compelling reason to go there again.
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Here's how new sales currently break down:
Android: 48%
IOS: 19%
RIM: Who cares any more? We just want to know who's going to buy them.
WebOS: Oops!
WP7: Rounding error.
Android is getting over half a million activations a day, and that number is increasing by 5.5% every month. You might consider it a bad thing, but people must like the wide choice of Android devices available if they're snapping them
Next evolution of slashdot (Score:2)
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Is that like projecting your speed onto the windshield so you don't have to look down at the gauges?
TFA has one really great insight (Score:2)
That is, previous MS entries into the tablet realm have failed largely because tablet support was added to Windows as an after thought. MS tablet users had to use the Windows paradigm with support for a touch screen, stylus, handwriting recognition, etc. bolted on after the fact. This made for a crappy user experience. Palm and Apple both understood from the get go with their Palm Pilot and Newton lines that took the tablet paradigm as being central to the user interface. Android and iOS maintain that parad
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And it did not help that the real seller for Windows, MS Office, did not get tablet support at all thanks to a exec that did not see the point, and stonewalled any attempt at adding features that would make tablet use easier.
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They need to compete on price. (Score:2)
The main reason MS tablets never sold was one reason.
Price.
Who was going to by a Tablet PC when they were priced equal or more (sometimes twice as more) to a laptop offering. Even Origami UMPC's when they came out were one of the cheapest tablets out there, but at over $700 with only 1 hour battery life and laptops hovering around or below that price, it was doomed. The only saving grace that came out of UMPC's were netbooks, and they sold primarily on price, with most of them priced well under $400.
What re
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I keed. I keed.
Well. WIndows 8 tables and andorid tablets differ (Score:2)
Different applications, different strengths, different weaknesses.
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(Seriously, no multi-tasking? No programs can run in the background and notify the user when something happens? "Tiles" are laughable replacements for notification icons)
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Perhaps that assumes too much (Score:2)
WARNING: what follows is the opinion of someone who has no intention of buying a tablet and has not used a smart phone for over a decade!
It assumes that there is actually more demand out there for tablets, only that the Android tablets just aren't good enough in the eyes of consumers to satisfy that demand. However, it could also be that Google's products are among the best around, but that there just isn't enough demand for tablets in general. I can imagine the latter being closer to the truth, in which
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My criteria for a tablet is definitely must "replace my netbook" and also ideal should be able to "replace my Archos".
I want fewer devices, not more. Although there are some compromises I won't make. So some devices remain in my gadget bag despite of how over hyped certain devices might be.
Microsoft victorious entrance (Score:2)
Microsoft victorious entrance into the new age of tablets will be MS Office for iOS :)
Market already saturated? (Score:2)
I think that the wild-fire over tablets has already spread and burned out. Many many people have tried tablets and didn't like them not because they didn't perform in some way, not because of "compatibility" with something or other, but because they have limited uses. Tablets are good eye candy and are good for data output, but not so much for input and that's where a lot of usability drops. (Those cases with bluetooth keyboards are a nice addition though... Put me down for one when they create a case wi
ASUS Eee Pad Transformer (Score:2)
Put me down for one when they create a case with a cabled keyboard to save battery.
ASUS Eee Pad Transformer is an Android tablet with a removable keyboard dock, and it starts at $550 or so.
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Thinkpad Tablet case connector is standard USB, so you can plug any keyboard if you do not have the case near you for some reason
Of course..... (Score:3)
"In NASCAR, you can finish a race in the Top 3 by leading the whole way or by having spectacular crashes take out those ahead of you
Of course in NASCAR, unless you are there at the start of the race, you aren't even in the race, regardless of how fast your car is, regardless of how skilled your driver is and regardless of how many people crash.
allready at least in 3rd (Score:2)
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Insofar as a product that doesn't exist can be considered in third place.
Three Horse Race (Score:2)
Android rules phones. Apple rules tablets. And Microsoft rules desktops. Quibble about the exact numbers or satisfaction of users, but that's the basic reality today.
All three are making plays to get more dominant in someone else's kingdom. But the two desktop contenders: Apple and Microsoft may be trying to go for a unified platform too early. Do users really want to select cell G7 in Excel on their phone under Windows 8? And certainly Apple users haven't been completely happy with trends coming the other
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You lose points for misuse of a buzzword.
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Consider my triply-mixed metaphor, my use of buzzwords are the least of my posting's problems. But thanks for pointing it out. :-)
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Don't get me wrong. I have a Mac and use Lion (just as I have a Honeycomb tablet, Linux box, and Windows server; part of staying current in Tech is not being blind to trends and competition).
Lion could get iOS users to DEMAND Macs for the desktop either by improving the software (adapting iOS to the desktop) or by improving the hardware (getting touch input on the Mac itself). Neither of those seem likely to arrive in 6 months, but both are more likely after 1 or 2 years of refreshes.
Under the hood, Lion's
Windows on ARM and the 4 core problem (Score:2)
The problem is right in front of the article authors face but is missed. Windows is bloated and requires extra hardware and extra battery and therefore extra wei
Confusing (Score:2)
Last Week: Android has 20% of the tablet market!!!
This Week: Android Sales are Sluggish!!
Seriously, all this marketing psycho-babble is really starting to confuse me.
"market entry remained slight" (Score:2)
The point the article seemingly misses is that "the market entry remained slight" for Windows Tablet Edition for a very specific reason. It SUCKED. XP Tablet Edition sucked. Windows 7 Tablet Edition continues to suck. And just parenthetically, Windows CE sucked and every mobile platform ever based on it sucked. Now, I'm writing this on a Windows 7 PC, and it doesn't suck. This is Microsoft's strength, they've gotten good at it, and the hardware industry has finally caught up to the point where even wi
Android is the killer app for Microsoft (Score:2)
Its not as crazy as it sounds. A version of powerpoint that would work with an android phone would be a fantastic application.
Imagine a scaled down version of Microsoft publisher for android tablets. If I were in charge of Microsoft, I would
create an entire division for Android mobile apps. Why do they even need windows phone, its reinventing the wheel.
Microsoft Office is the moneymaker not windows itself. I cant imagine why Microsoft wouldnt create a version
of Office for Android(with file compatibility wit
The successful Windows tablet... (Score:2)
We've already heard this (Score:2)
It was when Microsoft launched the Zune. We kept reading articles about how Zune sales were meeting all of Microsoft's expectations, and how it quickly shot up until it was outselling all other non-Apple portable music players. Heck, there was even a time when the Zune supposedly outsold the iPod [gawker.com]. Oh, and of course there was the "never count out Microsoft" crowd. Yeah, the Zune did really well... right up until they stopped making them.
More recently, we've heard similar things about Windows Phone 7 devices.
Buh? (Score:2)
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Google cannot hope to stay relevant if all it allows from the majority of devs are free apps on its market, and since most users don't care to load other markets, devs aren't going to bother with a platform that doesn't let them sell.
Wow! Are you kidding me?
Google doesn't ALLOW devs. to get paid for their work?!?
If Apple did this, Slashdotters would be in the streets with pitchforks and torches.
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Google cannot hope to stay relevant if all it allows from the majority of devs are free apps on its market, and since most users don't care to load other markets, devs aren't going to bother with a platform that doesn't let them sell.
Wow! Are you kidding me?
I don't kid.
;-)
And don't call me Wow!
Google doesn't ALLOW devs. to get paid for their work?!?
Not unless you're part of a select group of countries. Link to my blog and spread the word. I'm seemingly the only android dev who isn't blinded by fanboyism to the point that I'd keep quiet about it. No one else is making this an issue, and until it becomes news, google aren't likely to fix the issue. :-)). Searching the 'net shows that no one else apparently cares about this, which makes me think twice about which platform I sho
My Blog Takes A Stand [lelanthran.com] (or something
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This has little to do with tablets. Your comments apply to android phones, as the majority of sales are to phone users.
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I feel they do matter, and I am not alone. Google needs to get their act together. I want to develop exclusively for Android, but I don't care much for exploring innovative and novel marketing techniques in the form of advertising, selling services, etc. I want to sell software, and they won't let me do so on their store.
I don't want to sell advertising, and I'm not alone.
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Its all about the developers. MS right now has a weak (from a technical point of view anyway - perhaps the aesthetics are better) platform, with very little technical merit to it. But if the choices are "Sell software on a weak platform", "Give away software on a strong platform", or "find another job", the WP7 and iOS platforms already look better.
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And you ignore the benefit of having advertising in your app and hence making money like that.
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And you ignore the benefit of having advertising in your app and hence making money like that.
Not everyone's dream is to be a conduit for advertising, and not everyone wants an ad-supported product. In fact, most devs just want to do development, and plenty of people are willing to pay for an ad-free product.
It's unreasonable to ask that devs do more work, open their app UI to a third party *and* waste their users bandwidth simply because they aren't allowed to sell the naked app as it is.
IOW, Google shouldn't be putting up hurdles for no good reason. FWIW, I'd prefer Android development over
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IOW, Google shouldn't be putting up hurdles for no good reason.
Might the cost of complying with 200 different countries' censorship and tax codes be a good reason?
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Especially as they have local offices in my country (AFAIK).
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Google very literally doesn't have an excuse for their position. Even if they themselves could not do it, they should at least allow devs to receive payments via paypal. They don'
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IOW, Google shouldn't be putting up hurdles for no good reason.
Might the cost of complying with 200 different countries' censorship and tax codes be a good reason?
Oh, cry me a river! Either Google wants to play in the street with the big dogs, or they need to stay on the porch.
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Microsoft already has a failed developer-friendly Application Store. It simply isnt enough to be developer friendly..
The middle man can chant "developers developers developers!" but the developers are chanting "customers customers customers!" and the customers are chanting "applications applications applications!"
This circle-jerk be bootstrapped... but not simply by being developer friendly. The easiest way is to guarantee lots of customers into the system right from the get-go...
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But why should one go to WP7 if he can get in a much larger market on iOS?
None whatsoever, in fact I'd personally prefer to go with iOS if android is not available. WP7 has some severe limitations.
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FIRE SALE! $99 for the 16gb model, and $149 for the 32gb model. I guess HP finally found a way to sell them.
Really? HP's website says that they're "Out of Stock" and I haven't found any retailers or online stores actually selling them for $100/$150.
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You're forgetting about Microsoft employees who won't have a choice.
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If it was better for games and not from Apple then I'm all for it.
Though if it's simple games I don't see why they shouldn't be web apps.
If they are complicated with advanced graphics and such then I could see how Microsoft could one-up especially Android.
Storage limit for web app cache (Score:2)
Though if it's simple games I don't see why they shouldn't be web apps.
Probably because web applications don't run on zero bars of signal unless they're tiny enough to fit into the storage limit for the device's application cache [w3.org], which on an iPad appears to be as small as 5 MB. A passenger with a Wi-Fi tablet in a vehicle has no Internet connection but can still run native applications.
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Nope. It phones home with identifying info regularly.. And their systems have been collecting wifi and cellular data for a long time. You can read about their exploits in the recent news.
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RIM is one step above irrelevance. They're ripe for a takeover bid so one of the big players can scarf up all their patents. While technically accurate, there really are only 3 real players in the market
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*waits for the laughter to die down
Thank you thank you, don't forget to tip your waiter
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LoB