Monday, September 20, 2010

Google Android to beat iPad

Google Android to beat iPad http://alturl.com/87tdk

Tablet computers running Google Inc's Android  will star t taking sales from Apple Inc's iPad this holiday season and may surpass it in a few years as device makers adopt the software for a slew of models. Samsung Electronics Co showed the newest Android-based tablet for the US market at an event in New York. AT&T Inc, Verizon Wireless, Sprint Nextel Corp and T-Mobile all have agreed to sell the Galaxy Tab, Samsung said in a statement. The device will be available in time for the holidays, carriers said.

Smartphones running Android have already surpassed Apple's iPhone in the US, according to researcher Gartner Inc. Google may repeat its success with tablets because its operating system is freely available to any company, said Ed Moran, director of insights at Deloitte Services LP. There are a whole slew of factors behind the success: the open-source nature of it, the lower price, it's not proprietary to one company, Moran said in an interview. Will that port over to the tablet? I don't see why not.

Dell Inc, Acer Inc and LG Electronics Inc have said they will make Android tablets. Motorola Inc, which makes Android- based smartphones, hopes to introduce a tablet computer early next year, co-Chief Executive Officer Sanjay Jha said. AT&T and Sprint will subsidise the price, two people familiar with the deal, who asked not to be named because the plans weren't public, said last week. The Galaxy tablet, which has a 7-inch screen and can play high-definition videos, will go on sale in Europe in October, according to WP Hong, Samsung's head of global planning. The device can also run Flash Player.

The device is as comfortable to use standing on a crowded train as it is relaxing on the couch at home, Omar Khan, Samsung's chief strategy officer, said in the statement. The design makes it completely pocketable in your pants or jacket. Though Google doesn't charge for Android, broad adoption of the software may open up related revenue opportunities. The company could increase its mobile advertising sales, expand the market for its search engine and boost its application store, said Jim Friedland, an analyst at Cowen & Co. By having an open Android system out there, it's actually accelerating the adoption. Tablets will increase the amount of time that people stay on some sort of computing device, which expands the traffic and people that Google can monetize.

Android tablet evolution

Android may take three or four years to outsell the iPad as it evolves into a system that can take advantage of the larger screen and video capabilities of tablets. That's similar to the amount of time it took for Android to develop and become popular after the iPhone was released in 2007. Apple, based in Cupertino, California, sold more than 3 million of the touch-screen iPads, which access the Web and work as a calendar, media player and e-reader, in the first 80 days.

'Wild West'

Dell, based in Round Rock, Texas, sells a 5-inch Android tablet called the Streak and will follow up with devices that have larger screens next year. Android for smartphones surpassed the iPhone and BlackBerry in the US last quarter, Stamford, Connecticut-based Gartner said last month. Globally, Android became the third-most popular operating system, with its market share jumping to 17.2 per cent from 1.8 per cent a year earlier. Globally, Android trails Nokia Oyj's Symbian and BlackBerry maker Research In Motion Ltd. The competition for market share is similar to Apple's rivalry with Microsoft Corp when personal computers became popular. Apple had a "cleaner product that was easier to use," though not as many developers worked on the platform because it wasn't as widely deployed. Restrictions on applications that go into the App Store can hold back innovation.

We have an extensive experience in the field of mobile application development which is wide spread across every mobile OS. Click this Link to learn about our expertise http://alturl.com/bzvr7

No comments:

Post a Comment