Today is the day Apple is expected to release its fabled tablet device, but what can consumers (and businesses) expect to find, and how does it change the portable PC ecosystem?
After months of speculation, rumors and flat out
misinformation, Apple’s closely guarded, worst-kept secret, a touch-screen
tablet device, is expected to debut at an Apple press event in San Franciso. In
the week leading up to the event, Apple CEO Steve Jobs hinted at the product’s
release in a press statement concerning Apple’s 2010 first-quarter report this
week, saying he was “very excited” about a “major new product release.”
The tablet, if it is indeed formally announced, is expected
to include Wi-Fi functionality, a 10-inch touch screen and retail for around
$1,000, although potential agreements with carriers such as AT&T (which
currently has exclusive rights to the iPhone) or Verizon Wireless may result in
a subsidized cost to consumers. Last week British newspaper The Guardian
reported Apple is quietly seeking an agreement with U.K. network operator
Orange to help subsidize the cost of the device. Earlier in the month, Business
Week also suggested Apple is looking to ink a deal to help subsidize tablet
costs to consumers, but this time the company was a far less likely partner—no
less than Apple arch-rival Microsoft. The magazine quoted two sources “familiar
with the matter” who said Apple is in talks with the company to use Bing, Microsoft’s
recently launched search engine, as the device’s default Web browser.
Other media outlets have reported on possible deals with
news organizations like The New York Times and publishing house HarperCollins
Publishers to offer e-books and news content on the device, which would put it
in direct competition with e-readers like Amazon’s highly publicized Kindle
device. According to The New York Times article featuring mobile analytics company Flurry,
the device will run an updated version of the iPhone’s operating system, OS
3.2. Remarks by France Telecom deputy CEO Stéphane Richard, the tablet will
also feature a Web cam, though the company later backed away from those
remarks, arguing the comments during the interview were "taken out of
context, then interpreted into English."
Michael Oh, president and founder of TechSuperpowers, an
Apple care and retail specialist and founder of Codex Development, specializing
in mobile applications, released a white paper on the tablet called “Apple
Tablet Myths: The Impact of a Multi-Touch Enabled Tablet Device on the Market,”
in which he and co-author Alex Bartfield identify the ecosystem the device
might survive in. The also identify its consumer and business applications,
namely as a revenue-generating news device, an enterprise reporting and
business analytics tool, home automation and “the ultimate GPS, audio and video
device” for the car.
“We predict that if Apple does release the tablet as rumored,
it will do so with a multifunction device that will appeal to consumers on
every level: Design, functionality, utility, flexibility and its ability to
connect them to new content,” the report concludes. “Combined with their extensive
developers network and the Apple Store, the Apple tablet could be the next big
thing in technology. Whether or not it will leverage all these factors and
sell millions to become a category defining device, only time will tell.”
Join us on February 1 for an encore rebroadcast at either 5 am or 12 noon EST and discover how business intelligence (BI) supports companies in uncertain business and economic
climates. Get expert advice on how to create a strategy that fits your organization's needs and budget and see how quickly it can pay for itself.