Rivals struggle to compete as Apple gets ready to unveil a second-generation iPad on Wednesday. The internet has been abuzz with industry insiders and Apple lovers expressing desires and speculation regarding what the maker of iPhones, iPods, iPads, and Macintosh computers has in store at an invitation-only event in San Francisco.
Cryptic invitations provided the date, time and location of the event and displayed an image of a March 2 calendar page peeling back to reveal a corner of an iPad.
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The message on the page reads “Come see what 2011 will be the year of.”
Technology analysts have taken to referring to 2011 as the “year of the tablet.”
All bets are on Apple taking the wraps off an improved version of the iPad that chief executive Steve Jobs introduced at the same downtown San Francisco venue in January of last year.
Jobs, however, is not expected to play his usual role as host at Wednesday’s event. While he has reportedly remained involved in overall strategy and product development, the Apple chief, who turned 56 last week, is on an indefinite medical leave of absence.
Goldman Sachs analysts, in a note to investors, said they expect Apple to “announce the second-generation of its game-changing iPad.
We expect the device to provide an early line of defense against the wave of tablet competitors arriving in coming months,” they said.
The Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas earlier this year was rife with gadget manufacturers showing off tablets they were racing to get into a market set ablaze by the iPad.
Motorola Mobility chairman and chief executive Sanjay Jha said Monday the US telecom maker is pleased with early sales of the Xoom, its iPad rival.
“They’re off to a good start,” Jha said of sales of the Xoom, which costs between US$600 and US$800.
The Xoom is the first tablet powered by “Honeycomb” software crafted specifically for such devices by internet powerhouse Google and has been heralded as a viable challenger for iPad.
Another upcoming rival, the large-screen version of the Samsung Galaxy Tab, is also powered by Honeycomb.
Apple sold 14.8 million iPads through the end of 2010, according to the company’s earnings statements.
The second-generation iPad is expected to be slimmer with increased memory, a more powerful computer chip, and front and rear-facing cameras giving it the “FaceTime” video-conferencing ability featured on iPhone 4 smartphones.
“In today’s consumer marketplace, you can’t go very long without an upgrade,” said Gartner Research analyst Ken Dulaney. “And the other tablets have at least caught up to last year’s model.”
Dulaney expected much of the event to be focused on improved software, with only minor changes to iPad hardware.
“The product was so good out of the shoot that I don’t think there is a radical change forthcoming,” Dulaney said. “You make your money off hardware, but the power and control comes from software.”
Van Baker, also a Gartner analyst, was certain Wednesday’s news will be an iPad boasting iterative improvements but no startling changes and no change in price.
“The ‘wow’ has already been done — for all intents and purposes Apple owns the tablet market right now,” Baker said.
“Everybody is talking about the Xoom, but who the heck wants to pay 800 bucks when you can get a perfectly good iPad for 500 bucks?” he asked.
The US$600 Xoom is only available with monthly data plans that easily add hundreds of dollars a year to the cost of using the tablets.
The six iPad models range in price from US$500 to US$830 with the three higher-priced models having 3G mobile telecom connection capabilities.
Lower-priced iPads are designed to take advantage of connections at wireless internet hotspots. — AFP