Tuesday's
iPad blitz was exactly as impressive as the rumor mill predicted: We
now have a sleeker large iPad and an improved smaller iPad. The real
surprise was the news that so much software now comes with these things,
free with purchase. While Apple is charging a premium on the new
products that could drive some buyers to cheaper alternatives, the
inclusion of updated iLife and iWork apps strengthens Apple's best
tablet asset: It explains what people should do with the tablets.double wall stainless steel thermos bottleSure,
you can read, watch movies and check email on pretty much any old
tablet — and if that's all you want to do, there's an Amazon Kindle
selling for $229 that should suffice. Seriously, what Apple did not do
Tuesday was offer value-pricing, even though it did drop the price of
the original Mini to a somewhat competitive $299.
iPhoto
is newly redesigned to fit iOS 7's style and upgraded so you can do
real stuff, like building photo books. iMovie, a historically
labor-intensive app, got streamlined a bit: If all you want to do is
quickly trim and share a movie, you can do it without creating some kind
of "project." That said, if you want it, there's now multi-screen video
editing software engineered to work well with the new iPads' A7 64-bit
chip.Last (and perhaps least) is Garageband, a beilin-bearingmusic
recorder that, on the new iPads, can give you up to 32 tracks of
simultaneous audio. Though I haven't used it to record any music yet, I
just might, especially now that the iPad Air has two microphones for
(hopefully) improved sound quality and range.Let's face it, this could
be a popularity play: In the years that iWork has been competing with
Microsoft Office on Macs, it has won over few devotees that I know of.
But telling a shopper that this new tablet can edit Word documents and
Excel spreadsheets with a super-friendly touch interface for no extra
charge, that's a good way to close the deal.
"The
fact that Apple is changing the name of the product indicates it's more
than a slight refresh," Avi Greengart, research director for consumer
devices at Current Analysis, told me. He says this is a way to gain a
new audience,fag bearing or
at least get the attention of buyers who may be lost in the tablet
shuffle. While he concedes that the name change is a bit of a marketing
play, he says the "Air" is not just hot air. "It's a marketing pivot
backed by the product."Greengart also doesn't have a problem with the
pricing. Sure, there's no $229 offering to compete with the Amazon's
Kindle Fire HDX or Google's Nexus 7, but there's a lot of people who
will spend more for Apple's apps and ecosystem, he said. And regarding
global competition with Amazon and Google, Greengart said that Apple's
sales reach is far greater.
China
remains unconquered territory for the iPad, just like the iPhone, but
Greengart said that more retail outlets in China, rather than an overall
drop in pricing, would do the trick. "There are affluent consumers in
second- and third-tier cities in China, cities with tens of millions of
people." More stores would mean more iPad sales.Back in the U.S.A.,thermos flaskwhere
Apple has been facing increasing competition from Android tablets (and
even a teeny but growing Microsoft contingent), the question is,tapered roller bearing how
much will this "what to do with a tablet" message reach people during
the holiday shopping season? To put it another way, how much extra are
people willing to pay for top performance and design — and a boatload of
"free" software?
No comments:
Post a Comment