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Saturday, April 14, 2012

Google CEO Reveals Android's Tablet Future

In Google's most recent earnings report, CEO Larry Page said of "lower priced tablets that run Android" that "we definitely have a belief that there is going to be a lot of success at the lower end of the market as well, with lower priced products that will be very significant. And it's definitely an area we think is important and are quite focused on."

Analysts like those at Droid Life believe Page was alluding to the 7-inch "Nexus tablet" that Google's reportedly working on. This piece on The Week sums up the reports, including the expected July launch date. But it's worth pointing out that the tablets at "the lower end of the market" which are currently having "a lot of success" aren't the generic-brand Target specials, or even the lowest end Samsung Galaxy Tabs. They're the Barnes and Noble Nook Color (and Nook Tablet) and Amazon's Kindle Fire, neither of which run what Page called "the full Google version of Android" but both of which have sold in the millions, and are the only "tablets" that have any mainstream mindshare or marketshare aside from Apple's iPad.

Here's a look at the reasons why, and the ways Google may be pursuing an identical strategy.

Cheaper price and smaller form factor than the iPad

This part is basically non-controversial. No $399-$499, 10-inch tablet has managed to successfully compete with the iPad, if by "successfully compete" you mean "drawn any significant percentage of buyers away from it." But the Kindle and Nook have, because they aren't just generic-brand iPads; they're iPad-like devices that less-affluent buyers can actually afford, and that people who already have an iPad can pick up in addition to it. For about the same price as an iPod Touch, you get a device with a much larger screen, that's tied into the same e-book and media store you may already use on your black-and-white e-reader.

Integrated content store

"Content" means more than just apps. It means games, music, movies, and e-books. Of the three successful tablet companies so far, all three run their own stores, and Google's rebranding of the Android Market as "Google Play" shows its desire to put a Google-owned content ecosystem at the forefront of the experience. Which means that just like how Amazon's store and the iTunes store are wired into the Kindle and iPad all over the place, the Google Play store may be too if Google can make its own tablet. Which may involve ...

A custom OS or UI skin

As Charlie Kindel opines in a blog essay, Google will abandon Android, by which he means the Android brand and "generic" Android design. Instead, something more like the Kindle Fire or Nook Color is likely, which may not even be Android branded but might be Google Play branded instead. (Too bad they can't call it the Google Play Station.)

End-to-end control of the experience

Amazon, Apple, and Barnes and Noble all control the entire official experience you have with their tablets, including the software, the hardware, and retail. (Amazon and Barnes and Noble use Google's Android code, but because it's open-source they can modify it all they want.) Now that Google's bought Motorola, expect it to start building its own tablets for this initiative; if not at first, then soon afterwards.

The biggest problem for Google, with this regard, is its lack of a retail presence. The company tried selling Nexus One phones directly from its website a couple of years ago, and didn't do all that well with it. Worse, Google Play lags behind its competitors' retail cachet as well. No one thinks of Google the same way that they do of Apple or Amazon ... but that may be exactly how Google thinks that it needs to be seen, in order to survive the decline of its search business.

View orginal artical here- Android


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