Archive for 'Kindle Color Tablet'

2/21/2014:  Microsoft Reported to Have Office Apps for iPad

It has been reported as far back as November that Microsoft was writing a version of its legacy Office Suite for the iPad.  Now, the rumors surface again, with source saying that the app will be ready soon and submitted to Apple for approval.

The Apple app monitor, the Daily, has seen a working prototype of the software.  According to The Daily, Word, Excel and PowerPoint files can be created and edited locally and online.

It is also believed that the suite will be made available with  few weeks.

Microsoft promptly refuted (kinda) the proposition that they would sell Office for the iPad, but they did not deny it outright.  They simply stated that the story was based in “inaccurate rumors and speculation.”  The Daily promptly defended their story and stated again that they had seen an actual demo of the software running on an iPad.

Barnes and Noble Reports 2011 Was a Good Year And it Was a Bad Year

It was a good year because B&N grew their overall sales by five percent to $2.4 billion:

$1.49 billion (up 2% for the year) in their brick and mortar edifices.

$420 million in online sales (UP 32%)

$542 million in all forms of Nook sales (Up 38%) 

It was a bad year because in spite of their increasing sales and solid market share for their Nook family of eReaders and tablets, they lost $94 million on their Nook business.  When the final profits are announced it appears the losses on the Nook business will force their total profits will be negative.

B&N did confirm that their Nook and online book sales held about 30% of the overall e-reader market.  This fact is, itself, reassuring that B&N is on the right track with their eReaders and their digital offerings.  Both are popular, deservedly so.

B&N also announced that the price of the original Nook Color will be reduced to $169, down from $199, and that they will be offering an 8GB model of the Nook Tablet for $199, $50 less than their 16GB model which will continue selling for $269. These price cuts and new model will bring them into a better competitive position with Amazon’s Kindle Fire.

2/20/2012: Amazon Planning a 6 & a 10-inch Screen This Year

The rumor mill is flying about two new devices from Amazon.  The first, and a surprise, is a 6-inch color eReader.  Screen_Shot_2011-12-15_at_12.56.24_PM_large_verge_medium_landscapeThis would not be an LCD color but an e-Ink color for eReading only. The Chinese newspaper the Economic Daily News is reporting that Massachusetts-based E Ink Corporation has landed an order from Amazon for an estimated three million color e-reader modules per month, with shipments expected to begin in March.

E Ink owns the black and white e-ink process, and recently announced its first color e-ink display of which several commercial devices have already employed. Mirasol is used by Kobo in South Korea and a couple of specialty readers in the U.S.  This would mark the first color eReader (as opposed to a tablet) that Amazon has chosen to sell.

Then there is the rumored Kindle Fire 2, or whatever name they choose, for an 8.9-inch tablet that would compete more closely with the iPad.  Supposedly this will be available later this year—possibly in the second quarter.

2/15/2012:  BlackBerry Playbook Increases Market Share

It looks as if the BlackBerry Playbook’s price cuts have gained RIM’s tablet some market share.   Canadian source now measures the Playbook’s Canadian tablet share at 15% of all tablets, whereas the share was only 5% last fall.playbook

It is questionable whether RIM can make any money at its current $199 price for its base model, but it is hard to see that they would sell well at prices above the Kindle Fire.  One can buy market share, sometimes, but it may not be a solution to the problem.  It does move inventory, however, and that, apparently, is what RIM needed late last year.

2/13/2012: Samsung Updates 7-inch Galaxy Tab

Samsung has provided pictures and specifications on an update to their original Galaxy Tab—the 7-inch version.  The new version, called the Galaxy Tab 2, does not make a radical departure from the original.  It has a 1GHz dual-core processor, 1GB RAM and a 1024 x 600 LCD screen.  It will ship with Android 4.0 (Ice Cream Sandwich) which is an improvement.image

It will have a three megapixel rear-facing camera with a VGA for the other side.  It will also come with Bluetooth, WiFi, and a 3G model for the cellphone providers.

There is no official pricing announcement, but a Swedish blogger has seen the krona prices for it, and translated into greenbacks, the price appears the be $450 for the lowest memory unit with WiFi only, and $563 for a 3G model.  These currency conversions will probably hold for American prices, but it gives us some idea of what to expect.

Prices for a unit bought under a cell phone carrier will be less, of course—perhaps as the $200 prices seen for its predecessor a few months ago.

From this data it looks to me as if the 7.7-inch version, not yet available in the U.S. is where I would put my money.  Much high screen resolution, better processor and many other features will probably garner the most attention.

The Tab 2 will go on sale in Europe before the U.S., and the exact date is not yet know

2/3/2012:  7-Inch Android Tablet $99 from Sprint With Two-Year Contract

Sprint, beginning on Sunday, Feb. 5, will sell a 7-inch Android Tablet running version 2.3, for $99.  to get this price one must sign a two-year data services contract.  The contracts provides for 1 GB per month of 3G data for $20 a month, 3 GB for $35 and 5GB for $80.

The Optik tablet, manufactured by ZTE, a Chinese company, has fair to less than fair specs.  Screen resolution of 1280 X 800 is better than some.  It has a relatively slow Qualcomm Snapdragon dual-core processor that runs at 1.2GHz speed, 16 GB of storage memory, and a 5 Megapixel camera and another 2 MP for front facing pictures.  The Optik also has a mini SD card slot.  The weakest part of the design is in the WiFi radio.  It will run 802.11 b/g, which is one generation behind the three-times faster “n” specification that most everyone else is offering now.  And it will soon be two generations behind when the 802.11 ac begin appearing later this year.

The China-based ZTE is making its debut into North America.  It holds No. 5 spot in the global mobile phone market for the last quarter.  It almost caught #4 LG Electronics in the most recent quarter.

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Ray Hendon

Ultraportables, which include the newest incarnation of thin and light laptops, the Ultrabook, are thought by some to be a threat to tablet computers.  The instant-on capability of Ultrabooks are believed to be especially attractive to those who have been buying tablets because of this feature.  image

It appears likely to me that Ultrabooks and other thin and light laptops will do well in the market place, especially when their prices fall a few hundred dollars.  But whether they will dampen any of the enthusiasm for tablets is another matter.  Personally I think both form factors satisfy separate needs for different users.

One feature of the new Ultrabooks that will help resolve the question is whether they will serve their owners as competent eReaders.  Surely there are some prospective buyers who would prefer to own only one device rather than two—but only if the one could do the work of two.  Can an Ultrabook do both heavy duty computing and convenient eReading?  Can one design satisfy both these needs?

Certainly a dedicated eReader or a tablet have some advantages over a laptop, even a thin and light one.  Reading electronic books, for example is probably done best by a device that closely emulates the look and feel of a book.  The popularity of the Kindle and Nook are thought to owe much of their success to their similarity to printed books.

How essential is the look and feel,  though, to those who read a lot.   This article takes a look at the possibility of using these new, thin and light computers as an eReader.

To put this question to a practical test, I loaded the top three eReading applications to an 11.6” screen Asus UX21 to see how they worked.  The applications chosen to test are:

Amazon’s Kindle App for PCs, Macs, iPad, iPhone and Android devices

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  • Barnes and Noble’s Nook Application for PC, Mac, iPad, iPhone  and Android devices
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  • Sony’s Reader Application for PC, Mac and Android devices

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To give you a taste of the difference, I have taken screen shots of random pages from eBooks on the three applications I mentioned.

Beginning with Amazon, a screen shot of George Eliot’s Daniel Deronda, is displayed in the two column format for laptop viewing. The screen shot is taken of the Kindle application for PCs.

Screen of Kindle Reader in Two Column Format

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The Kindle app is widely praised for its versatility of layout options, underlining, comments, bookmarks and especially its syncing abilities.  This app also has go-to options that ease navigation, and dictionary lookup for a highlighted word.  All these features work on Ultrabooks. 

Amazon also has a user friendly policy of allowing you to direct any book in your library to be sent to any device on your registered list of devices. Amazon is indifferent as to which device or how many you use for any their electronic titles.  It treats them all the same and syncs them in an effortless way. The moment I registered my latest laptop, the Asus ZenBook UX21, all books in my library were immediately available for reading.

The strongest features of Amazon is, in my view, the ease of use of its website.  It is easy to find books, send them to the device of your choice, and generally navigate their vast site.

Equally strong is the selection of books, magazines and newspapers. They claim over a million titles, but that includes some categories such as “Singles” that represent a new class of literature that is generally shorter than a book but longer than an article. 

The worst feature of Amazon is that they insist on using a proprietary format for their eBook files.  It has an AZW extension and works only on Kindle software or hardware.  Although all the free sites I use give the option of downloading their books in the AZW format, in practice it is not terribly inconvenient.  Amazon also can read PDF files, and they will convert your Word for Windows documents to a format that allows you to put them in you Kindle library.

The other downside to Amazon is that they use DRM (digital rights management) on everything, so there is no cutting or pasting using anything in the AZW format. 

The Nook eReader software also provides a good reader experience. The screen shot below is from one of their pre-DRM works. Don’t be fooled by the small typeface. My screen capture utility shrunk it because the Nook takes up more of the horizontal space of the computer screen than the Kindle reader, so it has to cut the size down to fit within the pasted space. In practice, the Nook screen is as readable as any other.

Screen shot from the Nook Reader using the dual pane format

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All the formatting and user options are available for the Nook reader–font size, margins, highlighting, lookup, go-to. And the B&N syncing feature is excellent between devices, and they offer their reader software app for a wide range of devices.

As far as eReading goes, it is hard to find much to prefer of B&N over Amazon or vice versa.  Both are excellent and have almost identical features.

The same is true for selection of books. B&N’s inventory is huge, and they have a good selection of free public domain books—as good as or better than Amazon’s.

Nook uses the ePub format, as does Sony, although both will read many other formats as well.  They do not read Amazon’s proprietary AZW file format, however.

Something of an oddity: The Nook reader treats all ePub software as DRM protected, so they do not allow cutting or pasting of non-DRM books.  Even on the iPad, whose own iReader app allows cutting and pasting of non-DRM protected material the  Nook does not.

Sony’s reader app provides a good reading experience. The screen shot below is from an ePub file of a non-DRM version of Sherlock Holmes.

 

Screen of Sony Reader’s Dual Column Layout

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As with the Nook, the Sony Reader software uses more of the landscape screen to display its materiel than the Kindle app, so my clipping software has to reduce it to fit the pasting space. But Sony gives one plenty of formatting options and page control.

Sony lags both Amazon and B&N with book selection and syncing ability.  Their books are generally priced high; they have few free books, and their selection doesn’t match its two larger competitors.

Sony makes its reader software available to fewer devices—no iPad, no iPhone, no BlackBerry, for example.  They have syncing available to the three types of devices they support, but I have not tried it personally.

I like the Sony reader app for its ability to read almost any kind of document regardless of format, except, of course, Kindle documents. I will always have their app installed on my computers in case a particular book is not available in the Kindle format.  And they allow cut and paste options for non-protected books.

I find all three of the reader software about equally enjoyable to use. The differences in layout and options are not terribly important. I find I use the Kindle app more than the others because I find more books on their site I like, and I like to sync the books among all my devices. Still, I maintain active use of the Nook and the Sony Readers.

Summary:

First, the reality of the size and convenience of specialized eReaders and tablets makes it clear that they have the advantage. It is not possible for an ultrabook, weighing in at 2.9 pounds, to be as convenient to use as a 7-inch tablet or even the pound and a half iPad.

However, it is also inconvenient to carry two devices if one will do. So, there will be occasions when a thin and light laptop could be a suitable substitute for a dedicated eReader or tablet. 

At bottom, all of these tested apps work well on an Ultrabook. And they would work just as well with the software from other vendors such as Kobo or Blio. If your eReading preferences include comic books, magazines or children’s books, then you might like a specialty reader designed for the formats unique to these publications.

While all the eReading apps work well on an Ultrabook, it still may not be your preferred way of reading electronic texts.  But they are completely usable as a primary or secondary eReader. The choice of one over another is more dependent on which site you prefer to use because of its particular strengths than to the characteristics of their eReades.

From my experience, I have given away my Kindle reader. I simply do not want to carry another device with me in my travels. Now that I have a 7-inch tablet, the Samsung Galaxy Tab, I use it as my eReader of choice because of its lightness and ease of holding in one hand. I use the iPad for e-reading infrequently, but there are occasions when it comes in handy. Its weight, though, makes it a second choice, especially for long reading times. 

I rarely use a PC or my ultraportable for reading, but if I do it will be on the ultraportable.  Its lightness and instant-on feature does make it a better choice than the older, heavier laptops, but it is not as convenient to carry as a tablet.

An ultraportable may not be your favorite way of reading electronic texts, but it serves as a completely satisfying vehicle for reading if you want to carry only one device with you or if an occasion arises when it is all you have to use.

 

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Reports out the last few days point to Barnes and Noble looking at ways of selling some or all of their Nook line of eRedeaders.  The problem is an odd one.  By most measures the Nooks have been successful products.  They competed effectively with other eReading devices, and the Nook Color almost singlehandedly defined a new niche in the tablet category of computers.

The bottom line, however, is that the sales success has not been translated to B&N’s bottom line:  the large book chain has not found  a way to sell their fancy new devices at a profit.  Development costs are high, as are the costs of keeping the products up to date in a fast-paced technology industry.image 

B&N is said to be looking at two options:  The first is to sell the brand to another firm that could afford to continue developing the Nooks and to promote them in American and international markets.  It is understood, apparently, that these products need further development and to be promoted more than they are now if they are to become profitable.

The second option would be to sell a large percentage of the products to another firm but keep  a minority interest.  This would allow B&N to reap some of the expected profits from the line as it reached critical mass.  And it would free them from the need to raise additional capital.

Lurking behind the issue is that B&N is not currently profitable.  Furthermore, if they sell or drop the line of eReaders, what they are left with is a dinosaur brick and mortar book chain that is steadily losing ground to the same digital markets that the Nook has helped define.

Some analysts feel the Nook is doomed and will eventually disappear.  The price pressure applied by Amazon is simply too much for each of their products, the e-Ink Reader that sells for $100, the Nook Color for $199 and the Nook Tablet for $249.  At these prices, there is no margin left for profit and not enough money coming in to continue their development efforts.

If there is to be a buyer it must obviously be one with deep pockets.  Microsoft and Google qualify as having deep pockets.  But do they have the compelling interest?  It is hard to see Microsoft blowing itself up even beyond their present size to take on such a different breed of cat.  It is not an area in which they have much of a proprietary interest.  They are not hardware manufactures at their core; neither are they book sellers, electronic or otherwise.

The case for Google is better.  They have an electronics bookstore, although it is not doing particularly well.  And they make the Android OS that runs many of the eReaders, both e-Ink and LCD types.  They would have better bargaining power with the publishers for the electronic titles they would sell.  Perhaps a partnership would be possible for them.

It also seems that Sony could be interested.  Their selection of electronic titles lags B&N and Amazon, so they would gain traction in an industry that is not in their wheelhouse.  They make eReader hardware now, so there would be some duplication in picking up the Nook line.  However, Sony could use the Color Nooks to enhance their offerings in the 7-inch segment of the tablet market.  Furthermore, Integrating these two sides of the Pacific might me more than Sony could do given their current state of struggle in the computer market.  This makes them a longshot, in my view.

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The Kindle Fire has generated more interest in tablet computers than any other product since the iPad. Kindle e-reader customers have suffered long with their eInk, non-touch readers, and there is obviously a large number of Amazon customers who -were waiting for a full-color tablet.

Amazon KindlePreorders Preorders went so well that Amazon recently upped their initial production run to 5 million units that they expect to sell before the end of the year.

There are now some hands-on reviews to note.  There is something of a consensus that the Fire does well at some things and not so well at others.  The best and most unambiguous strong point is in the selection of videos (movies, TV, etc) and how well they play on the 7-inch screen.  Also, the integration of the operating system with Amazon’s content is praised, although this point is also a matter of contention as being Amazon’s way of selling content.

The down side seems to fall into five areas

  • Browsing is slower than $500 tablets.  The iPad beats the fire in rendering pages by half, and page turns are jerky and clumsy.
  • Magazine reading is poor—the 7-inch screen is simply too small to properly render a magazine page properly.  The reader has to eliminate the graphics in order to read a page—no pinch to zoom capability for magazines.
  • Screen resolution at 1024 by 600 is poor when compared with better tablets.
  • Less than audiophile-quality speakers and headphone output.
  • Little memory for internal storage and no external storage option other than the cloud.

There is also criticism about the lack of cameras and a few other features that had to be sacrificed to stay within the $200 price point.  Most of the reviewers seem to be comparing the Fire to $500 and $600 tablets, and the Fire looses these comparisons, as one would expect.

Another generally agreed upon feature is the e-reader app is excellent, as one would expect.

The other area of agreement is the excellent choices of downloadable movies and other media available through Amazon.  Amazon has made deals with Netflix and Hulu to bolster their content.

Below are a few reviews  The first on is Amazon’s own video—this is not a critical review..

Kindle Fire Demo Video

Video Review: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u3Opi9VZt8s

An early video of surfing on the Fire:

Surfing with the Kindle Fire

Written hand-on review from Associated Press: http://news.yahoo.com/review-kindle-fire-sacrifices-under-200-050342124.html

Hands-on review from Wired: http://www.wired.com/reviews/2011/11/kindle-fire/all/1

Hands-on Review by MSNBC technical editor—Positive review: http://technolog.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/11/14/8790557-kindle-fire-review-yes-its-that-good

The question not often addressed by the reviewers is will the Fire be enough to satisfy its buyers?  That cannot be known until the new tablets get into the hands of its ultimate owners.  I suspect the Fire will probably work well for many users. It will surf, it is tightly integrated with Amazon’s movies, music and electronic books. It will stream video, check e-mail and have some form of text entry for notes and letters. For many users, this will probably be enough.

But, is the Fire a good option when compared with other $200 7-inch tablets?  That cannot be answered either, since there are no comparable 7-inchers out there other than the Nook Color—comparable that is in terms of price.  Other $400 and $500 7-inchers are much better in most things, but no everyone can afford the high end, and these devices are integrated well with Amazon.

With Amazon’s marketing muscle and decent machine they will have a hit and probably end the year with the second place in tablet sales behind the iPad. In terms of pure specs, the Fire is more toward the low end of the market rather than the high, but when the build-quality and software integration is included in the definition it is not a low-end machine. It has a reduced feature set, but it does a great job in what it does.

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Barnes and Noble has yet to be heard from since Amazon surprised the e-reading world with its announcement of their entry into the tablet domain with the Kindle Fire.  On the surface the Fire looks uncomfortably close to the Nook Color with a dual core processor with tight integration with content on Amazon’s website.

On Monday it is being strongly rumored that B&N will finally answer the bell with a couple of new wrinkles on its original Nook Color.  The new device will carry the name Nook Tablet, and it will feature a 7-inch display powered by a Texas Instruments adaptation of a dual-core ARM chip that T.I. has given the sonorous name OMAP4. 

The chip chosen is similar to the one used in the Fire, although the Fire will use a Snapdragon variation of the same dual-core ARM design.  However, the Nook Tablet will run about twenty percent faster (1.2GHz vs 1.0GHz for the Snapdragon).  To B&N this speed boost justifies a $50 premium over the Kindle Fire.

The new B&N tablet will have the same resolution as the Nook Color and the Fire and will run a version of Android (what’s new) they have modified.  It will have some tie-ins with Netflix and Hulu and others, but it will be a more powerful Nook Color which runs a single core at a slower clock speed.

The Nook Tablet will carry a $249 price tag, while the older Nook Color falls to $199—not a moment to soon. 

Specs below:

  • Display: 7″ touchscreen
  • Processor: Dual-core 1.2 GHz CPU  (TI OMAP4)
  • RAM: 1 GB
  • Internal Storage: 16 GB plus a SD Card slot (expandable up to 32 GB; possible dual-boot with Android if it’s anything like the Nook Color)
  • Battery Life: 4 hours for videos; 8 hours with Wi-Fi off
  • Weight: 400 g
  • Pre-orders start on November 7, arrive by November 16 in the U. S.
  • Works with Hulu Plus, Netflix Pandora and more
  • $250

A picture of the new Nook family of devices is shown below.  nook-tablet-leak-2_thedigitalreader

The price of the eInk Nook will also drop to $99, more or less equaling the price move by Amazon on its black and white Kindle line.

The announcement is scheduled for Monday, November 7, with orders being delivered around November 16th.

The internet on their new machine will be accessible only through a WiFi connection.  I am curious as to whether a 3G/4G version might be introduced down the road.

With this announcement the 7-inch tablet world is being fleshed out.  From the Asian manufacturers not tied to book stores, the Samsung Galaxy Tab+, Acer’s A100, Toshiba and others, their feature is full Android capabilities.  These tablets can function as e-readers just as well as the Amazon and B&N devices, but they will not have the close tie-ins to content.  There is probably room for both designs, and it will be interesting to see how it plays out.

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10/21/2011:  Amazon to Allow Trade-ins of Old Kindles

Amazon has announced they will accept old Kindle reader models as trade-ins on purchases of new equipment.kindle-trade-in

The old equipment will be taken in exchange for a gift certificate valued from the information shown above. 

10/15/2011:  Motorola To Sell New “Family” Version of Xoom for $379 This Weekend

Motorola is trying something new tomorrow.  At Best Buy stores, and only at Best Buy, Moto has reduced the internal memory of its Xoom to 16BG, added a bundle of kid-friendly software and renamed the product as the Family Edition of the Xoom.  They have also chopped $120 from the price, and now, starting tomorrow, will be sold for $370. xoom-family

No one knows if this will be permanent or temporary, and whether the old Xoom will long continue not selling at its $499 price.  It may be a trial balloon to see how sensitive the tablet market is to a price cut.

No Android tablets are selling well at $499.  The iPad2 dominates this market at that price, and none of the competitors are offering a compelling reason to pay the same amount for what is a lesser product.  Adding some bells and whistles is not, so far, enticing many to buy their “almost” iPads.

All the producers are looking for ways to keep prices as high as possible but low enough to attract buyers.

10/14/2011:  Kindle Fire May Ship 5 Million Units by End of Year

An analyst for Rodmart and Renshaw, Mr. Ashok Kumar, now predicts that Amazon will ship as many as 5 millions Kindle Fire 7-inch tablets by the end of the year. This is an increase of about one million over previous estimates.  When asked why he was upping the forecast, he said. “They [Amazon] have received record orders.”

A potential fly in this ointment of optimism is the ability of Amazon to get delivery on enough of the 7-inch display screens.  This form factor has put a huge burden on existing manufacturers, and the total supply is highly constrained by existing production capacity.

By comparison, Apple is shipping about 12 million iPad2s each quarter.  Given that the Kindle Fire doesn’t begin delivering until November 15th, it puts the Kindle Fire in the top rank of iPad competitors.  The Samsung Galaxy Tab 7 shipped only about 2 millions units its first year.

10/11/2011:  Samsung Galaxy Tab 7.0 Plus at $399 and $499

I was clearly wrong when I said earlier that Samsung got it about the proper pricing policy on 7-inch tablets.  I said that when they reduced the price of their Tab 7, the original 7-inch Android tablet, to $200 with a data plan.

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As you can see from the ads above, the replacement of the original isn’t priced to sell.  It isn’t known yet whether the new Tab + will be able to take a SIM card for GSM cell phone capabilities, but if it is, then that would make these prices a little less onerous.  But if not, the prices they are starting with will leave this 7-incher sitting on dealer shelves.

10/10/2011:Acer Announces an Ultra-thin Laptop, The Aspire S3-951

acer-aspire-s3-1

Acer is first to market with a low-priced Apple MacBook Air competitor.  Acer is offering its second generation Core CPU (i5 Dual Core), a 13.3-inch HD screen, both a SSD and HDD, and a 0.51-inch thick aluminum and magnesium chassis that weighs just 2.98 pounds.

At a suggested retail price of $899 one can buy a configuration similar to the 13.3-inch ultra-thin MacBook Air, which retails at $1299.  The 13.3-inch 16:9 Acer screen features a 1366 x 768 resolution as opposed to the 13.3-inch MacBook Air’s 1440 by 900 (native) resolution.

The Aspire S3-951 comes with Windows 7 Home Premium, and the MacBook Air runs Apple’s iOS Lion.

Besides the price, another interesting feature of the Acer is its combination SSD and spinning hard drive.  The 20GB SSD handles the system files for quick boot times but a 320GB HDD gives the owner plenty of storage room.

The S3-951 will be in stores later this week, and an i7 model with greater SSD and HD storage capacity.  No hands-on reviews promised soon with are available as yet.

10/5/2011: Kindle Fire Orders @ 250,000 in Five Days

Least we doubt the effectiveness of Amazon as a marketer of tablet computers, A leaked document to TechCrunch shows that about 50,000 orders a day are coming in.  In the tablet world no other vendor except Apple’s iPad has equaled this number.  It looks as if Amazon has a winner with their new tablet.Kindle Fire Orders

10/2/2011:  Amazon Buying WebOS and Palm?

According to the technology site Aventurebeat is reporting that Amazon is in serious negotiations with HP to buy the WebOS system. According to the report Amazon is negotiating for the entire Palm portfolio which includes the Palm smartphones, WebOS and many patents.

A case can be made for Amazon wanting WebOS. It is a capable OS that would distinguish Amazon’s Kindle line of tablets from all the Android system. It is harder to see that Amazon would want Palm itself, however. Them getting into the cell phone business as a producer seems farfetched, but it could happen. The Palm line of phones is so tainted with failure that it is difficult for me to see how Amazon could benefit from it.But, that is a call Mr. Bezos must make.

10/01/2011:  HTC Flyer Drops to $300 Today

One of the earliest pricing reaction in the 7-inch tablet world is HYC Flyer.  Yester it retailed for $500; today it sells for $299. HTC Flyer

It is hard to make a case for a $300 price of the Flyer, although it is one of the best 7-incher devices on the market today.  Two cameras, high res screen, fast, dual-core processor, and pen input.  Will tablet buyers go for an extra hundred in order to get these things?  We will keep out eyes out for signs of another price cut before the selling

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The ability of electronic devices to morph from one form to another is a source of confusion in the minds of consumers. For decades there were tablet computers, but there were no electronic readers. Then electronic readers were introduced, and within a few years browsing capabilities were added, more or less as an afterthought but not done well.  But, the distinction between these two categories was blurred just a little.Amazon Kindle

Then the tablet computer morphed from a very expensive pen-centric business device that was a sub-category of a laptop into a hand-held device that is now a category of its own. It wasn’t long before Amazon and the other eBook sellers developed reader applications that allowed these new tablets to read eBooks, too. When you put a Kindle reader on an iPad, the iPad becomes an eReader, even though it was an afterthought of the designers.

Now we have two categories of devices that have inched closer to each others’ afterthoughts. The old distinctions are gradually melding into a commonality that makes it hard to make meaningful distinctions between them.amazon_kindle_wifi3g_3rd_generation.html_587589_g7

This confusion is not only demonstrated by the buyers of these devices. It is also on display by the blogs and eMagazine sites that keep track on the industry. As an example, notice what the data below shows how differently the different blogs and eMagazines treat this distinction.

PC World: Single category: Tablets/E-Readers.

Engadget: Separate categories: (1) E-Readers, (2) Tablet PCs. The Nook Color, by the way, is reviewed under the E-Reader category, although it could just as well be classified as a tablet.

Computer World No classification of either device

ReadWriteWeb No classification of either device

ZDNet Three categories: (1) iPad, (2) Tablets, (3) E-Books and E-Readers

Crunch Gear No specific classifications. They use “Mobile” and “Gadgets.”

Laptop Magazine Separate categories for Tablets and eReaders

Cnet Separate categories for Tablets and E-Book readers as a sub-class of Tablets

Tabletreaderinfo Single category: Tablet/eBook Readers

Sometimes our classification system fails us. And recently the original eInk providers, Amazon and Barnes and Noble, have introduced what are in fact tablets, but were designed and promoted as eReaders as their primary function. They also include tight integration of the eBook seller’s sites and all the electronic media capabilities. Still, they are tablet computers underneath and eReaders by heritage.color nook touch

I don’t have a solution for this failure to clarify. Although there are two clear divisions between these categories: eInk vs not eInk. But, this is not convenient terminology for anyone, although it does describe the difference fairly accurately. We will probably have to live with this confusion for a while until one or the other either disappears or does some more morphing closer to the other.

On my site I find that I spend more time lately reviewing the eReading capabilities of tablets than I do reviewing pure, eInk readers. The market is clearly moving away from eInk, although it could make a comeback. But, I can’t see how. It is a hassle to carry two devices with you when one is enough, and the way the technology stands today, the clear winner is the tablet with eReading software. I almost never use my old Kindle anymore. My 7-inch Galaxy Tab or iPad has taken over this function.

Nevertheless, there are many avid readers who prefer their old eInk devices, and they are the best way to read if you are out of doors. But I don’t see a bright future for this old technology. I am most curious as to how this plays out.  But confusion will reign for a while longer.

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Ray Hendon

These are muddled times in the 7-inch tablet computer market. Two of the best known brands, the BlackBerry Playbook and the Samsung Galaxy Tab 7, are both due for major upgrades and large price cuts. There is a strong rumor that the Nook Color is due for a major hardware upgrade next month, and then there is the new Amazon Kindle Fire, priced at $199, that is going to shake much from the 7-inch trees when its sales begin next month.

A couple of other major players, Lenovo , whose IdeaPad A1 may be priced as low as $100, and Acer have new models either released or about to be whose pricing is rumored to be quite low. On the opposite end of the scale, HTC has priced their 7-inch Flyer at $500 (reduced in the last few days to $299) and you get the picture of how unsettled things are in this new market.

The 7-inch form factor began about one year ago when Samsung brought out the 7-inch Galaxy Tab 7. It was originally priced at $500, equivalent to prices of a 9.7 or 10.1-inch tablet. This was, in retrospect, a major miscalculation on the part of the Samsung. Their vaunted product sat on the shelves for almost a year before it became apparent that in the tablet world, small screens did not stand a comparison with their larger screen cousins. Price have been in a period of adjustment since their first introduction, and they will continue to drop until some equilibrium is reached and they can sell what they produce at an acceptable level of profit.

On the more positive side, by the time this year’s holiday selling season gets fully underway the pricing of the new and old models will probably be more or less settling down. They most certainly will be lower. And many of the new models will have enhanced performance characteristics. There will probably  be some blowout pricing of the old models (Galaxy Tab 7, Playbook and HTC) for starters.

The oddest development in this market is how many manufacturers are jumping into the fray in spite of the lackluster sales. The large screens, especially the iPad, have taken off, selling in the tens of millions of units, while the slow-selling Tab 7 has sold perhaps 2 million units and the Playbook, introduced much later, may sell one million by the end of the year, if the price falls enough. These are not the numbers most in the industry expected for the small screen tablets.

It is hard to see why the vendors are so anxious to compete for the few dollars being spent on this small form factor. It must be that brighter days ahead are being seen by those who attempt to measure and forecast this market. Most likely the Kindle Fire will ignite interest, but all the other vendors are going to have to scramble for their share.

Below is a brief showing of how today’s 7-inches compare and a similar treatment of what’s coming down the line.

· Samsung Galaxy Tab 7

image

This tablet set the first standard for the new generation of small screen tablets. It runs Android in a reasonably consistent and smooth touch operation. Its camera is good, it runs Flash, surfs reasonably well and has, for its age, a bright and high resolution screen.

It features an ARM Cortex A8 1 GHz processor. Although somewhat obsolete now when compared with the dual core Tegra 2, it still furnishes a livable surfing and video experience, and app switching is adequate. Screen resolution is OK at 600 x 1024 pixels. It has high speed WiFi and serves as a 3G hotspot for Verizon and AT&T, depending from whom you bought it.

I bought mine for $200 and I have used it for a Verizon hotspot when traveling, do light surfing, much email and more eReading. It’s small size comes in handy when holding it in one hand. I have dropped it more than I would like to admit, and it has survived it all. It is a well-built tablet.

Unfortunately, there is no future for this guy. Its 7-inch replacement has been announced but it not yet available. And, Samsung has anothers replacement at the FCC proving grounds now, and its screen has grown to 7.7-inches with an upgraded processor and higher screen resolution. If it is priced right it will probably do better than its older brother. I would think there will be some blow-out prices for it within a month or so.

· Galaxy Tab Plus

image

The replacement for the original Galaxy Tab 7 is the Tab 7 plus. Shown at right, the new Tab 7 plus adds some important enhancements.

For starters, it features an up-dated processor, a 1.2Ghz processor (probably a Texas Instruments OMAP), thinner, lighter and with better video and photo. It also can make phone calls and has a fast HSPA+ speeds for data.

image· HTC Flyer (AT left)

The processor in HTC’s bright-screen tablet is a 1.5GHz Qualcomm® Snapdragon® that runs a 1.5 GHZ—very speedy This is an up-to-date chip, and the graphics and surfing ability of the Flyer are a tribute to a good design. Screen resolution, at 1024×600 TFT, is the same as the Galaxy Tab 7. It also features two cameras, GPS and Android 2.3. Its small screen can also be viewed on a large screen through one of its ports.

The Flyer also features a hand-held pen input. While nice, in some respects, it is not especially functional—it accepts pen input only as a graphic file.

It greatest drawback was its $500 price. But the day after the Kindle Fire was announced, HTC dropped its retail price to $299. Expect further price adjustment before long.

HTC has a good reputation for producing high quality equipment, especially in the smartphone market. But they didn’t factor in the effects of Kindle’s Fire. The fate of the Flyer is uncertain as of now.

 

 

 

  • BlackBerry Playbook

image

The PlayBook is an “almost” tablet. It has an operating system that is almost great, but it needs some honing for stability and for features. If it had a more competent set of email and contact features it would be much better. It was almost a hit, but its high price of $500 scared away buyers in droves.

Recent price reductions will help it find traction, but its fate, too, seems to me to be uncertain.

Its sales have been about a fourth to a fifth of their projections. RIM is cutting the price to the bone in Canada. This will spill over into the American market soon, as will some major upgrades to its software bundle. AT $200 is may be more viable, depending on how it is perceived by its corporate clientele. But Amazon has given them what may end up being a serious body blow.

The poor guys running RIM have been consistently behind the curve on this one, and it is questionable as to whether they can recover. They may end up being a takeover target of some vulture venture. It’s a sad tale—their hardware is great and it was almost a hit. But this isn’t horseshoes

· Acer Iconia Tab A100

Acer Iconia Tab imageA100, the company’s first 7-inch tablet, and the first 7-inch tablet to run Android 3.2. It features a Tegra 2 dual core processor, a five- and a two-megapixel camera, and micro-USB and micro-HDMI ports. Honeycomb runs without any kind of Acer OS overlay and with no proprietary widgets.

When its price at $329 for the 8GB model and $349 for 16 GB, those can be expected to drop by a hundred or so dollars now that Amazon’s Kindle Fire has been announced for $199.

I do not know if Acer can make money at these prices, but if they can it will be competitive in the tablet space. Good specifications and solid build quality will garner some buyers. How well it will stand up to the Fire, though, is not clear.

Reviews of the A100 are middling, but they were all done before the Fire was announced. The A100 is a competent tablet, but it offers no compelling reason to buy it unless it is priced at, say $149.99. If so, it might stand a chance.

For an Engadget review of the A100, Click Here

Nook Color Reader

image

 

Barnes and Noble has already mentioned their new Nook Color. But, its announced price of $249 will not hold now that the Kindle Fire is announced. Whether B&N can compete head to head with Amazon in this space is purely conjectural. I give the edge to Amazon, but B&N has proven to be a fighter, and they actually lead to the development of the 7-inch form factor much ahead of Amazon.

· Toshiba Thrive 7

image

Toshiba has come up with a good 7-incher in its Thrive. It is light, high resolution, and the reviewer for PC World praised the text resolution.

Although pricing is yet to be announced, it will sell well if they can keep it around the $200–$250 level. Whether Toshiba can do this and make money, though, is not know. Click Here for review.

The current crop of 7-inchers is looking up, but it will be some weeks or more before final pricing is stabilized. While the Kindle Fire has taken the lead in future outlook with its low price, there is going to be some robust competition for the holiday selling season.

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runraySeeking Alpha Certified

9/30/2011:  Samsung Galaxy Tab 7.0 Plus Coming

The Galaxy Tab 7.0 Plus was unveiled today, delivering an Android 3.2 Honeycomb tablet that comes with a 7-inch display and a 1.2GHz dual-core processor. Boasting 802.11n wireless support as well as HSPA+ compatibilities, the new tablet also comes in two sizes: 16GB or 32GB with a microSD slot to add more storage.Galaxy tab 7.0plus

No pricing is available yet which is not surprising given the blockbuster pricing announcement made by Amazon a couple of days ago.  It is rumored the Tab 7.0 Plus will sell for $200 with a 4G data plan contract with T-Mobile., but this has not been verified, nor has the availability of this new tablet.

It will be rolled out in Australia in October, and, presumably, later in the U.S. market.

9/27/2011:  Samsung Galaxy Tab 8.9 In Next Few Days

The Galaxy Tab 8.9 will be available for sale in the United States beginning October 2, according to Samsung.  Along with the announcement of the new device’s availability Samsung also mentioned a 4and 5-inch media player that will be available soon after that.

The price of the Tab 8.9 is said to be $469 for the 16GB version, with higher prices for more memoryThe new model is also apparently a WiFi-only model.  Perhaps 3/4G versions will be offered later.  Screen resolution is strong, at 1280 X 800, so the graphics should be great.

8/26/2011: Motorola Xoom in New 8.2 and 10.1-inch Models?

moto-tab-7-lg2

xoom2-siblings-hedThe rumor mills are flying now with photographs of two new Motorola Xooms in the factory. The top picture above is of the new 8.2-inch Xoom, supposedly to be called Xoom 2 Media Edition.  The second picture is of the back sides of the 10.1 and 8.2-inch Xoom 2.

The current preproduction models are said to be full of bugs, so it may be some time yet before we see these new machines.

The original Xoom does need an update to be faster and have more capacity, as well as lose some weight.  My first guess is that we will see both these new devices before December.

The news of the leaks have been reported in several blogs this morning.

9/24/2011:  Color Kindle Announcement on Wednesday?

All eyes will be on New York, N.Y. this coming Wednesday as Amazon convenes it recently announced press conference there.  The timing of the announcement and the mailing list of invitees strongly supports the supposition that the announcement will be about the Color Kindle, the highly touted potential competitor to the iPad2.

It is no longer a secret that a Color Kindle is in the works.  This has been confirmed by the top executives of Amazon.  Neither is it doubted that the new device is slated to be available for the upcoming holiday sales season.  Given this state of affairs, an announcement of its future availability will help put a stop to some of the early Christmas shopping for tablets, especially for Kindle aficionados.  It would be a major mistake to wait much longer before at least announcing the details of their new gadget.

It is possible, of course, that they could be announcing a new thinner touch Kindle or some other item.  But this scenario seems decidedly unlikely.  October is less than a week away.  The Christmas selling season is looming large.

I look for a seven-inch device, more like the Nook Color in design and price than the iPad2.  But I don’t know.  It could actually be more than one form factor—perhaps a seven-inch and a 10.1, too.

9/22/2011: Kindle Accepts Library eBooks

Amazon’s Kindle, for most of its existence, has been the leader in both sales and features of electronic books and book readers.  But for the last year or so it has lost the feature leadership to Nook and Nook Color.  The Nook was one of the first to joint the public library eBook lending.  Even the stodgy old Sony Reader series could borrow books from a public library.  Kindle was left out of this important ability, as is has in touch control.

But this changes today.  Now Kindle owners can set up a borrowing account with their local library and “borrow” an eBook for two weeks.

This move was done in the face of a clear trend for public libraries to get into the eBook business—pushed, of course, by the many eReader owners.  The growth statistics of library lending of eBooks is impressive.  From January to September of this year, according the to New York Times, the number of e-books checked out from public libraries increased by 75 percent over the same period last year.

There has also been an astounding growth of libraries around the nation that offer access to eBooks.  Two years ago only 12 percent of public libraries had this ability.  Today it is 67 percent.

Forrester Research estimates that roughly 15 million eReaders would be purchased in the U.S. this year, which will increase the demand for electronic services even more.

It is good to see Amazon responding to this new wrinkle in the electronic reading market.  The strength of the Kindle brand will contribute significantly to the growth of electronic reading of books and magazines, and it will help the Kindle stay competitive to an increasingly effective competition from Barnes and Noble and other reader sellers.

9/22/2011:  RIM’s BlackBerry PlayBook Sales  About 1/4th of Projections

In April of this year, RIM forecast sales of 4-5 million PlayBooks in 2011. Unfortunately, RIM shipped fewer than 800,000 units during the first half of 2011 and monthly shipments have dropped to about 100,000 units in the third quarter, according to their manufacturer in Taiwan.

The discrepancy in the difference in forecast and actual sales is attributable to several factors:  features on the PlayBook were decidedly lacking, depending on owning a BlackBerry smartphone to even get one’s email or access to contacts, and the price was too high.

The PlayBook was originally priced at $499—the price of a low-end iPad, but the owner would get only a fraction of the screen size for the same money, not to mention fewer features and a more stable operating system.

In an earlier article I noted that the 7-inch tablet cannot reasonably be expected to sell for the same price as a full-sized tablet.  And, it appears, RIM is getting the picture.  They are offering some Canadian citizens who work for one of the primary cell-phone service providers a half-priced PlayBook.  I hope this price will stick, because that is probably the only way they can begin to meet their inflated sales expectations.

9/20/2011:  Samsung Galaxy 8.9 to Launch Sept. 22 at Best Buy

Samsung has announced that its new 8.9-inch tablet will be offered at most Best Buy stores on September 22.  Some stores will not get their inventory until the 25th, however.

tab89

This is a new form factor that places the screen size just under the iPads’s 9.7-inches and 1.3-inches above their new 7.7-inch device.

In my testing I find the 7-inch form factor to be almost unusable for ordinary surfing, since a full web page cannot be viewed in a readable font size.  But, the 8.9-inch may solve this problem, although there will be much added weight.

But the smaller dimensions are handy for eReading, eMail and other activities where the screen size is less critical. The small size make for easier hand holding and stuffing in a back pocket. The industry will, some day, settle on some standard sizes, but in its current stage, every brand seems to be searching for the best size for customers.

The specifications for this new form factor include overall dimensions of 9.1” X 6.2” X .3”.  Weight is under one pound.  This may be a viable product, but the final verdict will have to wait until some hands-on time.  I will file a report as soon as my local store gets its inventory. Comparing a couple of other small screen form factors.

Length/Width

Screen Size

% of iPad 2

Brand

9.1 X 6.2

56.42 Sq.Inches

81%

Galaxy Tab 8.9

7.48 X 4.74

35.45 Sq.Inches

51%

Galaxy Tab 7

10.1 X 6.9

69.69 Sq. inches

100.36%

Galaxy Tab 10.1

9.5 X 7.31

69.44 Sq. Inches

100%

iPad 2

The price of the 8.9-inch tablet is said to be $470 for the 16GB model, which is 94% of the iPad2’s $599.  This makes it more expensive per square inch of screen size, but apparently Samsung is counting on the benefits of the smaller screen and weight to make up for this discrepancy

9/16/2011:  RIM BlackBerry Playbook Heading for Lower Price

The rumors are that the BlackBerry Playbook, RIM’s 7-inch tablet, will soon fall in price, although no one is saying how much the price cut will be.  Sales of the Playbook have been from half to one third projections.  About 900,000 have been sold, but the units are nor measured in sales to customers but in sales to stores.  So no one knows yet how many have actually reached customer hands.

RIM’s profits for the last quarter were down over 50% from the previous year, so something must be done to correct the problem.  Since a brisk selling tablet was part of the company’s strategy for success this year, adjustments must be made.

The rumors are also stating that a coming software upgrade will bring a native email application and other enhancements, so the upgrade should help push sales when combined with lower prices.

Prices on 7-inch tablets has been dropping lately, so I would look for a $399 price or even lower. 

9/13/2011:  Windows 8 On Display on Tablet

Windows 8, the new OS from Microsoft that represents Microsoft’s answer to the touch interface of Apple’s IOS, is demonstrated in the video of Engadget. Click her for video and article on a hands-on demo.

5/20/2011:  eBooks at Amazon Outsell All Print Copies

Amazon announced that since April 1 of this year, sales of Kindle books at their site have exceeded sales of all print titles.  According to their press release, for every 100 printed books sold, 105 eBooks are sold.  Furthermore, free books are not included in the sales figures.

This change has been building for several years.  eBooks sales exceeded hard-cover sales last year.  But now both hardcover and paperbacks combined sell fewer copies than the Kindle books.

5/11/2011: New Android Releases To Be Consistent

The Android Operating System has been an astounding success.  According to Google, 310 different devices run on Android, and there have been more than 100 million activations of the OS to date.

But there have been problems.  There are so many versions of Android that work on only one devices, and the versions between devices is confusing to everyone, developers and the public. 

Google announced that a new release out later this year will be of a new type.  Any application written for any Android device will work on any other Android devices.  To accomplish, the app will adjust itself to whatever device it runs on.  Thus, a developer who releases an app for a smartphone will find that the same application will work on tablets and television sets.  The version number will no longer relate to any specific device.

This is huge for Android.  Not only developers but those who use the app will also gain much from this consistency.

5/06/2011:  Kindle to Walmart Stores Soon

Walmart has been selling eReaders for a long time, but they have not sold the most popular eReader, Amazon’s Kindle.  Walmart offered the Nook and a cheap Kobo to their shoppers.  But that deficit will be remedied with a couple of weeks as the nation’s largest retailer picks up the nation’s most popular eReader, the Kindle 3G and the cheaper WiFi-version that is ad-supported.

This is probably the final stage of the life of the Kindle and other E-Ink readers.  Tablets have been eating into their once sacred domain, and recent data from Nielson suggests the transition from a single-purpose reader to a multi-talented iPad, or Xoom or Galaxy Tab is strongly under way.  Only steep price drops will keep the E-Ink devices in the game.  Perhaps we will see a $75 Kindle in the future, or even a $50 price tag for the low end units.

5/5/2011: Barnes and Noble With a New eReader?

Barnes & Noble has filed an 8-K form with the SEC that reveals its intentions to introduce a new e-reader.

“The form, filed earlier today, says that the company "indicated it expects to make an announcement on May 24, 2011 regarding the launch of a new eReader device. . ." Considering the Nook Color just got Froyo, is it possible we’ll be seeing a Honeycomb version come the 24th?” (Engadget)

Nothing more is known about B&N intentions, but I will be monitoring this with great interest.  Is it possible they will beat Amazon to the punch again by bring out a full-fledged Android tablet to market?  Stay tuned.

4/28/2011:Moto Xoom Sells 250K Units 1st Month

Motorola reported that they sold 250,000 Xooms in the first month of its young life.  Apple’s iPad 2 has sold about 4.7 million over the same period.  There is some speculation as to whether Xoom is a success or a failure, although it is impossible to say unless the sales goals Moto had for its tablet were known. I have yet to read a single review of the Xoom that put it on parity with the iPad, so given its high price and limited configuration offerings, it seems like a moderate success.  Motorola expects to sell 1.5 to 2 million units for the full year.

A better test of Android’s operating system 3.0 will be when Acer, Asus, Samsung and Toshiba announce the sales of their10-inch tablets.  By the end of the first half of the year, we will have a better picture.

4/27/2011: Archos’ Arnova 8 Tablet Now Available

Archos, the maker of cheap tablets and other devices, has their latest tablet, the Arnova 8, a $161 budget tablet, available for shipping at Amazon now.   The tablet has an 8 inch, 800 x 600 pixel display, Google Android 2.1, 4GB of storage, and support for 720p HD video playback. arnova-81

These are not impressive specs.  It has has a resistive touchscreen rather than capacitive and has an estimated battery life of up to 5.5 hours of video playback.

This device doesn’t qualify as a quality tablet, but at $161 plus shipping it may be of interest to some buyers.  It could do email, for example, and it has WiFi g.

Asus Eee Pad Transformer Sold Out on First Day

“The tablet just went on sale in the States, and it’s already out of stock at most retailers. Buy.com, Amazon, B&H, TigerDirect, DataVision, Newegg, and Best Buy all show the tablet as either out of stock or available for pre-order.”  source: Liliputing

It isn’t known how many units the retailers had in stock when the sale began, but it must have been few.  But all of them running out so soon seems to indicate a strong potential demand for the new tablet/keyboard combination.

4/25/2011: World’s Only Typewriter Factory Closing

The last standing typewriter factory in the world, Godrej and Boyce, is closing its plant in Mumbai, India.

Typewriter sales have plummeted in the past several years: the company sold less than 800 machines in 2010, down from the 50,000 it produced every year in the 1990s.

The last models produced were for the Arabic language.

Time marches on.

4/24/2011:  Nook Color Upgrades to Android 2.2, Adds Apps

nook-apps

Barnes and Noble is sending out an over the air upgrade to its Nook Color owners.  The upgrade will install Android 2.2 on their device and give users access to the Nook Color’s own app store.

The new app store has about 125 appst to begin with, some free, some paid, including Angry Birds, as you can see from the upper right icon on the photo to the right.

The new app also include a default email application, which, when added to an upgraded web browser, brings significant enhancements to the eReader that make it closer to a standard Android 7-inch tablet.

The upgrade will be rolled out over the next few weeks to existing Nook Color owners.

Dell Streak 7-inch Tablet, WiFi Only for $399

streak-7-wifiDell is ready to begin selling its 7-inch Streak with WiFi-only for delivery in a week or so.  Dell’s price for the WiFi model is $399.  Amazon is charging $20 less on their site.

04/23/2911 $499 HTC Flyer 7-inch tablet pre-sale next week at Best Buy

Best Buy will begin taking pre-sale orders for the HTC Flyer 7 inch Android tablet on Monday, April 25th. The tablet will be available in the US later this spring at $499.

The HTC Flyer features a 7 inch, 1024 x 600 pixel capacitive touchscreen display.  It joins a fairly limited field of 7-inch screen tablet.  The Flyer will also accept pressure-sensitive input from an included stylus.  This ability gives it an edge against Samsung’s Galaxy Tab and the BlackBerry Playbook, neither of which accept pen input..

The tablet has a 1.5 GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon single core processor and runs a customized version of Google Android 2.3. An Android 3.0 Honeycomb update is expected later this year.

/22/2011: Kindle eReader App for Android Up-dated For 3.0

The original Kindle eReader app for android was for smartphone-sized screens.  Although it would work on the Honeycomb 3.0 version, which was designed for tablets, it did not take advantage of the many features of the new OS.

Amazon has now fixed the problem by releasing a 3.0 version of the Kindle eReader software for Android.  This is good news for those who are in the market for one of the many new Android tablets coming to market.

The new tablet version offers a new layout for newspapers, magazines and is optimized to take advantage of the larger tablet form factor.

This was an essential update if Amazon want to continue its “buy once, read everywhere” policy.

4/21/2011;  Asus Eee Tab Transformer in U.S. April 26th, $399

This is good news for tablet buyers.  My earlier article (Click Here) provides the specifications and a couple of reviews.  A keyboard that attaches in a way to give it a notebook look and feel is said to cost another $150.  When Microsoft brings out an ARM based Windows this will be a viable product for laptop replacement.

4/20/2011: Amazon To Allow Kindles to Join Library Lending Services

Amazon announced Wednesday that it would join a library loan program for electronic books. The press release didn’t say the precise day the program would begin, but simply said “Later this year.”

More than 11,000 libraries in the United States participate in this electronic-book-loaning program, managed by a company called OverDrive. To see if your library has a contract with OverDrive, go to overdrivesearch.com and type in your ZIP code.

Amazon is late to the lending party. The Barnes & Noble Nook and Sony Readers already allow users to check out digital books from their local libraries using the service. The company offers more than 400,000 digital books and has had a library loan program for e-books since 2003.

The electronic-book checkout process is similar to that for real-world books. Eligible books are checked out for a certain period of time — two weeks in many cases — after which they become locked and inaccessible on a person’s e-reading device.

One needn’t own a Kindle to use the service, but it is necessary to have the free Kindle app on the device you want to use for reading the book.  This can include Android smartphones, iPads, PCs, BlackBerries, Macs, iPhones, iPods and Windows Phone 7s.

4/19/2011: LG G-Slate on Sale Tomorrow at T-Mobile

LG’s G-Slate for-Mobile goes on sale in the US tomorrow, for $529.99 after rebate with a 2-year service plan. It will run $729 with no contract..g-slate

The G-Slate features an 8.9 inch, 1280 x 768 pixel HD display, a 1 GHz NVIDIA Tegra 2 dual core processor, 32GB of storage, and runs Google Android 3.0 Honeycomb. It features an HSPA+ modem for speedy mobile interenet access.

It also has a 3D camera.

The early reviews for the tablet are in, and here’s what people have to say:

  • BGR: The G-Slate has excellent build quality, but there still aren’t many apps designed specifically for Android 3.0 tablets. The 3D video feature apparently works well, but BGR dismisses it as a “novelty.”
  • Laptop Magazine: The 8.9 inch display makes the tablet smaller than other tablets, but it weighs just as much as the Apple iPad 2. The viewing angles are great and the screen is very bright, but text seemed a bit too sharp on some web pages. (That’s a problem I experience regularly on 10 inch netbooks with HD displays).
  • Android Community: The tablet is one of the fastest around in terms of benchmarks, and the battery life is on-par with the Motorola XOOM.
  • TechnoBuffalo: The form factor is great, but T-Mobile’s HSPA+ isn’t as fast as Verizon’s LTE.
  • SlashGear: Aside from the pointless 3D feature, SG seems to like the tablet — but not the price tag.
  • Engadget: One of the few reviews to run a real battery life test, Engadget found the tablet ran for over 8 hours when playing HD video. That’s about the same as the Motorola XOOM but it falls short of the Apple iPad or iPad 2.

Also, Edgadget rated it:

Narrower profile fits nicely in the hand
Lighter than the Xoom
Solid 4G speeds

Plasticy back
No WiFi version available
Poor cameras

it weighs 1.3lb;

Review of Engadget: Click here.

4/15/2011:  E-Book Sales Take Over
From a CNN report:

“The publishing tide is shifting fast: E-book sales in February topped all other formats, including paperbacks and hardcovers, according to an industry report released this week.

E-book sales totaled $90.3 million in February, up 202% compared to the same month a year earlier, according to a study from the Association of American Publishers. That put e-books at No. 1 "among all categories of trade publishing" that month — the first time e-books have beaten out traditional publishing formats.

Update on BlackBerry Playbook Reviews

For an answer to the recent criticism of RIM’s new PlayBook, the BlackBerry CEO, Jim Balsillie, said in a Bloomberg interview that  "We’ll have an over the air email client to announce very very soon. We haveBlackBerry World — our user conference — in a couple weeks. Stay tuned for all capabilities we have coming out on this stuff."

The reference to the email client was the absence of that critical application on the PlayBook itself.  Owners of BlackBerry phones can link their devices to the new PlayBook and take advantage of the phone’s email capabilities, but this was not seen as sufficient for most users.

The reference to BlackBerry World was referring to the absence of many apps for the new device.  Although they promise Android apps and the legacy BlackBerry apps will eventually work on the PlayBook, it is just a promise.  For those buying today, that isn’t much consolation.  If the “couple of weeks” prediction is true, it means that there will be some apps available when the new gizmo begins selling later this month.

RIM stock declined 3% yesterday after the raft of middling reviews were absorbed by investors.

New Generation 13.4-inch ultra-portable announced by MSI

My recent post about the new generation of 11.6-inch ultra-portables can be updated for a new entry into the market, although with almost two additional diagonal inches of screen real estate.image MSI, the originators of the netbook, announced their new 13.4-inch ultra-portable, the X370.  Their new gadget uses the same AMD Fusion dual-core processor that Lenovo, HP and Sony use, the E-350.

4GB of memory, a 500GB hard drive, HDMI-out are included along with a 1.3MP webcam, a 4-in-one card reader and an 8-cell battery for about 7 hours of use time. It weighs 3.8 lbs with the 8-cell battery.

Listed at $599, Amazon is taking orders for $579.

My review article of the new generation of ultra-portables is seen Here.

For a Laptop Magazine review of the new MSI, click here.

4/13/2011: Video of The New WebOS Emulator in Action

An instructive video of how HP’s WebOS will look and feel when the HP Tab is released.

From WebOS SDK beta

 

 

4/11/2011:  Kindle Price Falls to $114 With Ads

Amazon announced today that the new Kindle with Special Offers will sell of $114 — $25 less than the currently lowest-priced Kindle.  The price reduction comes at a cost, however, as ads will be shown at the bottom of the device’s home page and its screen savers.  The new units will begin shipping on May 3, and it will also be sold in Target and Best Buy stores on that date.

This is another of a long line of price reductions of the Kindle, which began its life at a price of $399 in 2007.  No word on the Nook, yet.  It will be interesting to see if Barnes and Noble responds or keeps the Nook ad-free.

4/8/2011:  Acer Joins The Tablet Fray:  $450 10-Inch Model

Acer has announced its entry into the tablet world with its Iconia Tab A500 that will be available for sale in Best Buy and other retailers on April 24th for $450.

The new tablet will run Android 3.0, and the specs are impressive, essentially duplicating the Motorola Xoom:  a dual-core 1GHz Tegra 250 SOC, a 10.1-inch 1280 x 800 LCD screen, 1GB of RAM, 16GB of flash storage, a 5 megapixel camera around back and a 2 megapixel imager up front, HDMI-out, not to mention a pair of 3260mAh batteries that Acer claims are capable of eight full hours of life while playing HD video.

No reviews are out yet, but I expect some soon.   This is important because it breaks the $500 price barrier for a full-featured tablet.

Apple Applies For Patent on E-ink/LCD Switching Display

According to information released by the United States Patent and Trademark Office, Apple has applied for a patent that will allow displays on a screen to switch between LCD full color and an e-ink paper.  The device would detect when an eReading environment was needed and switch from internal illumination to e-Ink, making the display easier on the eyes and be capable of being read in direct sunlight.Apple eiNK

This must be sending shivers through Amazon’s R&D department, for it would completely obviate the need for a separate Kindle-type of eReader in addition to, say, an iPad.

The sketch to the right is from the patent application according to AppleInsider.

This is only a patent application, so it is far from being a product, but it seems like a sterling idea to me.  I am one of those who likes to read on the light-weight Kindle with its e-Ink screen, so I have to carry it with me if I’m traveling.

Admittedly tablets are heavier and can’t be held as long as the Kindle, but it would still be a big advantage not to have to carry two devices.

 

4/7/2011:  Samsung Galaxy Tab WiFi for $350

The Galaxy Tab has not been a good seller for Samsung.  It was priced too high, way too high, and its feature set was good but not outstanding.  The prices of its 3G models have been slipping, and now the WiFi-only version is to go on sale April 10 for $350.  This price puts it $100 above the Nook Color, but its design and feature set may justify a slightly higher price, but the specs on it are less than compelling than they were last year.galaxy tab

It includes a 1 GHz Samsung Hummingbird processor, a 7 inch, 1024 x 600 pixel capacitive touchscreen display and runs Google Android 2.2. It has 16GB of storage and weighs 13 ounces. It’s also one of the few Android 2.2 tablets to come with access to the Google Android Market  and Flash video.capabilities.  The tablet has 802.11b/g/n WiFi, Blueooth 3.0, and a USB 2.0 port.

The press release mentioned that it will be available at multiple retailers for that price

4/6/2011: Moto Xoom and Atrix Not Selling
Well

A report from analyst James Faucette of Pacific Crest says that neither of these new tablets are selling well.  The Xoom is priced too high and was up-staged by the introduction of the iPad 2.  The Atrix is also too expensive, and dismissed by some as a gimmick. Reviews have been mixed.

The sales of both are well below forecasts, with competition from the iPad 2 and from a welter of new Android tablets contributing to these high profile flops.

4/5/2011:  Dell’s 10-inch Win 7 Tablet Delayed
According to leaked documents from Dell, there is a new 10-inch tablet under development that runs Windows 7.  Its code name is Rosemount.
A recent insider story from Forbes indicates that the Rosemount tablet will be not see its first sale until the fall of this year.  Past rumors had it appearing in the summer months.

This will be a tablet aimed at the business user, and given Dell’s recently released five and seven-inch tablets, Rosemount will not make much of a ripple in the tablet-hungry population.  It appears to be more like the HP Slate rather than the iPad.

3/28/2011:  Samsung’s New Series 9 Challenge MacBook Air

Apple has owned the “Wow” factor for years in the ultraportable category of laptops.  The MacBook Air has been in a class by itself with the thinnest, sleekest, sexiest design available. IMG_0620_540x353 Although there has always been a tradeoff between thin and performance, the MacBook Air keep its balance in an acceptable zone for those who demand a super thin and light ultraportable.  The image at right has the MacBook Air on the left facing the 13-inch Series 9.

Samsung has now joined the competition with its Series 9 laptops.  The two models are thin, light and powerful with a Sandy Bridge design i3 or i5 Intel processor.  Both the 13-inch and 11.6-inch models are drawing rave reviews for their looks and performance.  Price, as usual, though, is high.

The 13-inch Series 9, shown on the right side of the above graphic, is priced at $1,649.  I have no word on the price of the 11.6-inch version which is to be available in early April.

CNet has reviewed the 13-inch model and has a video of their demonstration.  I like their early statement: “. . .if ever a Windows 7 lover dreamed of getting his or her own MacBook Air, the Series 9 is it.”  This sets the tone of the review.  The new Samsung takes only three seconds to awake from hibernation, for example, and compares well in other categories.

CNet Hands-on Video Here

Their full review can also be read on the same site as the video reference.

3/25/2011  RIM BlackBerry Playbook to Run Android Apps

In an important achievement, Research In Motion announced on Thursday that users of its PlayBook tablet will be able to run Android and Java applications.

If the RIM’s new 7-inch tablet is to be successful, it must be able to have a wide library of applications available to its users.  With a brand new operating system, QNX, however, there would be few to no apps available for the Playbook.  By making the new OS capable of running Android apps, then, RIM has taken that objection away.

The details of the announcement state that the Playbook will be able to run Android apps of version 2.3 and later, and they will not be available on the Android Market.  Publishers will submit their apps to RIM who will make them available in BlackBerry’s own app site.

Rumors now stress mid April as the release date for the Playbook.

 

3/22/2011:  Amazon to Open App Store Tomorrow, We Hope

An unnamed "trusted source" has told Wired that their App store for Android devices will launch Tuesday, March 22. Customers will be able to purchase apps both online via the Amazon website and through a native application designed for Android devices.

It is already known that the store’s launch will come with at least one major exclusive: the latest in Rovio’s Angry Birds lineup, Angry Birds Rio, will launch first in the Amazon App Store before being distributed to other online outlets.

It will be handy to use Amazon’s “One Click” buying procedure on Android Apps, whether for paid or free content.  Also, a hacker got a look at the App Store earlier and found that many of the app prices are lower on Amazon than on the Android Market.

 

3/21/2011:  Asus Eee Pad Transformer in America Soon

Transformer

Asus has a good idea in its new tablet design.  It may be bought with the optional keyboard that transforms it into a conventional netbook-like device.  Notice that the tablet mounts on the keyboard in a horizontal mode rather than vertical.  Good for Asus: I dislike the iPad’s vertical mount.

The specifications are familiar: A 1 GHz NVIDIA Tegra 2 dual core processor and a 10.1 inch, 1280 x 800 pixel IPS capacitive multitouch display. It comes with 1GB of memory and 16GB to 32GB of storage. While it will run Google Android 3.0.  802.11b/g/n WiFi, Bluetooth 2.1, a mini-HDMI jack, audio jack, and microSD card reader complete the  basic configuration.

If the keyboard looks and preforms as well as it appears in the picture, this will be an important innovation in the tablet sphere—possibly ending the existing division between netbooks and tablets, although tablets cost much more to buy, a combination would be preferable for those who value the extra flexibility gained by a detachable keyboard.

The new device will be available in Taiwan by the end of this week and in America soon thereafter.

3/20/2011:  Amazon Working on Android Tablet Reader

The rumor that never dies: Amazon is developing a color eReader that competes with the Nook Color and the iPad.  There is a good reason this rumor refuses to die:  Amazon needs to offer a more comprehensive solution to eReading than its black and white eInk Kindle. In the latest round of competitive moves, Barnes and Noble clearly beat Amazon when they introduced their Nook Color.  Kindle color

The color tablet fro B&N has proven popular, although precise sales figures have not been published.  In the blogosphere many in the technical press have praised the $249, 7-inch eReader/tablet.  It has been rooted and seems to make a credible alternative to other tablet designs.  Surely Amazon has been reading the tea leaves about a color device.  It appears that B&N beat Amazon badly with their Nook Color.

The new  rumors are fueled by hiring ads for Amazon’s Lab 126 website.  The New York Times reported: “At least five new jobs were added in the last week alone seeking developers with Android programming experience.”

Although Android programmers could be doing many things, the arrow seems to point to a new machine, and few would argue with the need for such a device from Amazon.  They have nothing on the market to counter B&N’s tablet/eReader, and they need one.

If Amazon is working on a competing device, I hope they go all the way with it and omit the proprietary layer of software that surrounds the Nook Color.  A pure Android OS would, in my view, be a much more competitive device.  It would capture some of the pure tablet market as well as conventional eReading, and Amazon’s marketing muscle could help them gain a foothold in this new market.

3/16/2011:  Motorola WiFi Only on March 27th

Motorola has officially announced that a WiFi-only version of the XOOM tablet will be  web available in the US starting on March 27th for a retail price of $599.  The WiFi + 3G model currently sells for $799.xoom-angle

Amazon, Best Buy, RadioShack, Staples, and other US retailers are reported to be authorized resellers and should be available in those stores on the launch date.

3/15/2011: HP Touch Pad With WebOS in June

The new CEO of HP, Leo Apotheker, announced that the TouchPad will be available for purchase in June.  HP announced the Tab in February for Summer availability. The Tab will sport a 9.7 inch display, a dual core 1.2 GHz processor, WiFi, Bluetooth, a 1.3MP camera, and a 6300mAh battery.

Significantly the tablet will be the first device to run webOS 3.0, a version of HP and Palm’s webOS smartphone operating system optimized for tablets

The new OS is what excites most of the technology  community.  The forerunner of this new OS was written by Palm for smartphones, and the reviews of it from the technical side were quite good.  It was praised by programmers as friendly and competent.  HP has spent the last year working on it to make it usable on larger, tablet-sized screens.  This device will be as highly anticipated as the Xoom was for Motorola and the Playbook for BlackBerry.

3/9/2011:  Samsung Galaxy Tab 8.9” Set For 3/28 Debut

Samsung has made it official.  Their 8.9-inch Tab will be unveiled at a galaxytab89-03092011-1299648445special press event on March 28th.

This side shot shows an exceptionally thin tablet, so it will rival the iPad2 thinness.The bulge is to accommodate the headphone jack, so you can get an idea of how thin it is if you look closely.

Samsung also has a 10-inch model that will be revealed sometime soon, giving them a total of three models: 7-inch, which has been out for months, a 8.9-inch and a 10-inch model yet to be shown.

 

Nook Color Gets GPS App Via Smartphone Tether

In a novel adaptation of a software app for the Nook Color, you can now use a $2.99 app to tether your smartphone to the Nook Color and get driving directions on the larger screen.tethergpshedpic01

TetherGPS is available from the Android Marketplace for $2.99.

 

3/4/2011: Motorola Xoom WiFi Only for $539 as Sam’s Club?

An employee at Sam’s Club has leaved a photo of a large sign showing the Motorola Xoom with WiFi and no 3G for sale for $539.  This may or may not come to pass, but if it does it will relieve some of the pressure against Motorola for pricing its new baby too high. A $40 premium over the iPad 2 is certainly justified by the huge advantages of more storage memory, external ports and system memory on the Xoom.

3/4/2011:  Windows 8 Will Run on ARM Chips

Microsoft announced that the next versions of Windows, Windows 8, will run on System on a Chip (SoC) processors, including ARM.  Microsoft also demonstrated Office applications running in native mode on an ARM SoC device.

For the entire press release: Click here..

This is huge for the entire industry.  ARM chips are powering most of the tablet computers, such as the iPad, Motorola Xoom, Galaxy Tab and RIM;s BlackBerry Playbook.  ARM chips also run almost all smart phones. And most of these devices run either Android, iOS or RIMs older OS,  With this move, Microsoft has made itself a player.

Using tablets and smartphones with native Windows applications will open up portability of documents between architectures for the first time.  It will eliminate the often clumsy and time-consuming steps of converting documents from Word format, e.g., into Pages format for the iPad or other word processing apps on all the other ARM based tablets.

Partners on the new SoC project include NVIDIA, Texas Instruments, Qualcomm, Intel and AMD.  I would expect a rush of all the other OEMs to jump on this bandwagon soon, as it would be a huge competitive disadvantage not to have the ability to read and write legacy Windows application programs.

The big looser in the long run may be Android, which is now the leading operating system for tablet and cellphone devices.  The ability to run Word, Power Point and Excel files will give Google a serious run for its money.

The release version of Windows is expected in 2012, with Beta release expected in the second or third quarter of this year.

3/1/2011:  Barnes and Noble Selling Nook Color for $199 on eBay

Engadget reports that Barnes & Noble is currently selling itsNook Color on eBay with a $50 coupon code.  This bring the final price down to $199, which is $50 less than it sells them for in stores or on its own website.

This may be B&N’s way of testing the waters for how elastic demand is for their flagship product.

2/28/2011:  AT&T To Sell Kindle 3G in March

AT&T announced today that they will carry the Kindle (3) with 3G and WiFi connections in their company-owned stores in the United States.  Sales are set to begin on March 6, one week away.

The 3G part of Kindle relies on AT&T 3G signals, so it is natural for them to sell Kindles.  This will certainly increase the availability of Kindles, but the price will stay at $189.  For a video of a Kindle commercial look below.

2/25/2011:  Google Books Available on Androids and PCs

Google has created a new Books section of the Android Market. The Books tab shows up if you’re running the Market app on a tablet with Google Android 3.0 Honeycomb (such as the Motorola XOOM which hit the streets today). But you can also browse the book listings in the web version of the Android Market by visiting market.android.com/books in a browser.

You don’t need an Android tablet to use the new books directory. You can select any title and click the “Get it Now” button to add it to your Google Books account. From there you can read the title on any computer with a web browser, or access the books from a mobile device running the Google Books app for Android or iOS. The Barnes & No

 

2/23/2011:  New iPad to be Announced March 2nd

Apple has scheduled an event for March 2nd, and according to Kara Swisher at All Things D, the company will likely unveil the second generation iPad at the event.

There isn’t much speculative about Apple’s plans to up-grade the iPad with new features.  This has been in the works since the day after the first iPad was introduced.  Rumors about new features include a much higher resolution screen, dual-core processor, and two cameras.  Light Peak ports are also talked about as well as multiple 3G mobile broadband capability.

2/17/2011:  Kobo Assures its Borders Customers All is Well

It was some months ago that Borders decided not to develop their own eReader hardware or  its own library of electronic book titles.  Rather than make a major investment in the new technology, Borders farmed the entire job out to a third party, Kobo.

It was Borders’ attempt to get by on the cheap; in retrospect, probably not a good idea.

Now that Borders has filed for bankruptcy, Kobo is out with a note to their Borders clients that there will be no interruption to their reading experience.  Kobo is financially independent of Borders and can continue supporting their clients.

I wonder without the draw from Borders how Kobo will do in the future.  Of course, Borders will emerge from bankruptcy eventually, but their long term survival is by no means assured.  Their management was too far behind the curve to make the cut in the new electronics world.

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