I first discussed a 7" iPod touch in March 2009. As a rose by any other
name would smell as sweet, here are some thoughts on the 7" iPad.
(Steve Jobs has talked about the disadvantages of a 7" tablet compared
to the iPad, so if he prefers it can be called the iPod touch 7.)
The 10" iPad has defined the tablet market after years of
indifference towards Windows tablets. In April, we should see a slimmer
and slightly lighter iPad 2 with the same screen size, more
memory, and a faster chip. It will be a good upgrade, a better model,
but no significant changes - apart from a camera for FaceTime.
The Competition
The market for Android tablets is yet to take off, although Samsung
managed to convince enough carriers and electronics stores to buy over
2 million 7" Galaxy
Tabs. It's too bad that ITG Investment Research found that 16% were
returned by mid January. While Samsung claims 2% returns, that's the
difference between repairs and customer dissatisfaction.
Much of that could be from trying to use a version of Android
designed for smartphones, and since Google has redesigned the new 3.0
(Honeycomb) version for tablets, it will be a much better test of how
well Android will succeed.
HP is looking to launch WebOS tablets this summer in its bid to make
more out of spending $1.2 billion on Palm. Early reports are favorable,
but until there is a price, a final tablet, and a launch, it's
impossible to know how competitive it will be or how many developers
will show serious interest. As little has been done with WebOS phones
since the takeover - and the then-CEO suggested HP had bought Palm for
other reasons - attracting more developers to WebOS will be difficult
without a very successful launch. These days it looks like HP offers a
more rigid corporate structure than Apple without the huge iOS market
to sell into.
RIM is talking up its PlayBook, a QNX tablet, which seems
to improve its specs every time the CEO talks about it.
Nokia and Intel still seem to have MeeGo
tablets, but reports from the Mobile World Congress at Barcelona
suggest MeeGo is not ready for prime time even if it survives Nokia's
embrace of Windows Phone 7.
Meanwhile, Microsoft is trying to dust off its Windows everywhere
strategy, which
has already failed once with tablets.
Judging by Samsung's Galaxy Tab and Motorola's Xoom, all
of these tablets will have difficulty in significantly beating iPad
pricing. This bears out Tim Cook's Analyst Conference Call remarks
about how aggressive Apple has been in pricing the iPad. This means
that competitors need to find tablet markets that the iPad doesn't
serve well.
Why 7" Makes Sense
The 7" iPad/iPod touch fills a major gap without a major
fragmentation of iOS. It doesn't matter if it's marketed as a small
iPad or a large iPod; it can still hit the same price points. People
expect to pay more for a larger iPod touch and less for a smaller iPad.
So $399 for 16 GB, $499 for 32 GB, and $599 for 64 GB works. With the
same resolution as the iPad and nearly the same pixel density as the
iPhone, iOS developers should be able to make any necessary adjustments
to their apps. It would then also make sense to use the same 1024 x 768
on the iPhone and iPod touch, instead of the current 960 x 720.
It's all about the weight. There are plenty of people - seniors,
kids, women - who don't feel comfortable handling a 730g tablet unless
they can put it on a table or prop it on their lap. This is why so much
of the advertising shows people reclining. For those who don't mind,
the iPad still needs both hands. Although Apple won't be able to make a
7" tablet at Kindle weight, but 400g (just above Galaxy Tab weight)
should be feasible.
It's all about the size. With a 7" screen and a bezel around the
outside, the size would be about 7" by 5.5" - small enough to fit in an
outside pocket in a handbag or pocketbook, a kid's backpack, or a
document case so that it could be used without taking it out. Large
enough for typing to be much easier than on an iPhone. Large enough to
better show and find your photos and videos and music. Large enough for
all those long car journeys that parents love. Large enough for the
regular commute to work, but usable if you are forced to stand.
It's all about the quality. While there are Android lovers and Apple
haters and plenty of companies looking to make a buck, most buyers
faced with a choice between a well engineered iPad and a plastic backed
Android tablet at a similar price point will go iPad. Until
Android tablets look and feel like an iPad or are significantly
cheaper, they won't attract buyers in large enough numbers to make a
market. Even Samsung, which makes most of the components itself, is yet
to undercut iPad pricing or offer as attractive a Galaxy Tab.
The Apple Advantage
There's nothing to attract the corporate buyers to Android either.
They already have a choice between RIM (if there ever is a PlayBook at
a good price), Apple, or even a Windows laptop for the same money -
platforms that IT is already supporting or knows it will have to
support.
Of course there is production to sort out. If there is tablet demand
that Apple can't supply while ramping up iPad production, those missing
out may buy something else. As iPhone 4 supply has barely kept up with
the growth in the smartphone market, it is always possible.
This is, however, where having a cash hoard helps. Apple can afford
to contract with suppliers for quantities that would put Dell's whole
business at risk, as it is doing with Samsung. So its rivals will have
to fight over the leftovers, and if components are in short supply, pay
premium prices. Even if the components are readily available, the best
rivals can do is buy at Apple's price, unless they are a manufacturer
and efficient enough to be an Apple supplier.
So why September? That is the annual launch time for the new iPods,
and this is much more a large iPod touch, hence my original article,
written before the days of iPads. It is even more of a consumer device
than the 10" iPad and will give a boost to the iPod product line, as
well as iOS sales in the Holiday quarter.
Calling it an iPad merely allows Apple to charge more, because it is
always easier to buy a cheaper version of a more expensive range than a
more expensive version of a cheaper range. It will also have the same
resolution as the larger iPad, that is a few more pixels than the
current Touches and 4x the screen size, and because the iPad is held
further away, this 7" version would be the Retina Display version of
the iPad until, in a couple of years, that too moves to a higher
resolution.
With this new iPad/iPod touch, a Nano completely customizable
watch, and a 128 GB iPod touch to replace the Classic, iPod sales
could start growing again. In any case, an expansion of the iOS market
is good for Apple and good for developers - and it will persuade
reluctant newspapers, magazines, and publishers that 70% is better than
nothing.