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In 2010, Steve Jobs said a 7-inch screen wasn't sufficient for making
great tablet apps. With the rumored iPhone 5 in the wings and a flimsy
business rationale, an iPad mini is unlikely to surface.
In October 2010, Steve Jobs explained in detail why a 7-inch
iPad, or iPad Mini, wasn't in Apple's future.
"Apple has done extensive user testing and we really understand this
stuff...There are clear limits on how close you can place things on a
touchscreen, which is why we think 10 inch is the minimum screen size to
create great
tablet
apps," he said. "One naturally thinks that a 7-inch screen would offer
70 percent of the benefits of a 10-inch screen...this is far from the
truth. Seven-inch screens are 45 percent as large as an iPad. This size
isn't sufficient for making great tablet apps."
Jobs would likely have stood by his negative view of the 7-inch tablet in checking out the Nexus 7 introduced at the Google I/O event
Wednesday. It may be a popular and lower-cost form factor, but it's a
significant compromise. It's like going from a 40-inch TV screen to a
27-inch screen for watching movies. It lightweight and works, but it's
not the ideal user experience. At 1280 by 800 pixels, the Nexus 7's
screen is sharp, but not when compared to the 2048 by 1536 resolution of
the iPad's 9.7-inch Retina display. And, of course, Jobs would say that
Android is basically an inferior rip-off of Apple's iOS.
But
in the "you get what you pay for" category, the 7-inch, $199 to $249
price point is an attractive option for the masses seeking tabletness,
especially for consuming e-books, magazines and other media. And
for Google, the Nexus 7 provides a vehicle to bring new customers into
the Google Play store, just as Amazon and Apple drive their tablet users
into their stores to gain credit cards and increased profit margins.
The Kindle Fire, Nexus 7, and Nook Tablet all retail for $199.
(Credit:
David Carnoy/CNET)
The Nexus 7 joins a parade of Android tablets trying to gain a
foothold in the mini-tablet space, including Amazon, Barnes & Noble
Nook, Asus, Samsung, Sony, Toshiba, and Lenovo. So far, the Androids
are mostly competing with each other rather than the iPad.
"One
thing Apple has done very well with each iteration of the iPad, not only
with hardware and software but also marketing, is position it as not
just a consumption device but also a production device. That's one of
the hangups with 7-inch tablets and also with the Kindle and Barnes
& Noble's Nook," said Tom Mainelli, IDC's research director of Mobile Connected Devices, in a report just ahead of the Nexus 7's unveiling.
Apple has long been rumored to be developing a 7-inch version of the iPad (CNET's Josh Lowensohn provides a list of the rumors over the last three years). But, Apple may not want to confuse the market as the long expected, larger screen iPhone 5 rolls out later this year.
And, it's unclear whether Apple wants to play in the 7-inch space,
given Jobs' stated objections in 2010. Apple's braintrust could
certainly change its mind and decide to sell a device that competes in
the 7-inch range, but it will depend on how it impacts the entire family
of iPhone and iPad devices.
Mainelli believes that Apple could
increase its market dominance with a iPad mini. "If Apple launches a
sub-$300, 7-inch product into the market later this year as rumored, we
expect the company's grip on this market to become even stronger," he
stated.
The cheapest iPad retails for $399, a long way from the
$199 Nexus 7 or Kindle Fire pricing. Amazon and Google are both selling
their 7-inch tablets at a loss. Google is selling the Nexus 7 at cost
and also footing the bill for marketing the device to create a market.
It's not the Apple way to offer an unsubsidized iPad at no
margin. Apple likely has margins of over 50 percent on each iPad sold,
and according to Mainelli, Apple's tablet business will continue to grow
this year no matter what the Android competition does. He projects that
Apple's share of the tablet market this year will make up 62.5 percent
of global shipments this year, up from 58.2 percent in 2011.
Android-based tablets are projected to decline to 36.5 percent, from
38.7 percent last year.
So will Apple
produce a the 7-inch iPad? With the iPhone 5 in the wings and a flimsy
business rationale, the iPad mini is unlikely to surface anytime soon.
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