Source - http://www.mercurynews.com/
By - Patrick May
Category - Suites Near New Orleans Sports Venues
Posted By - Homewood Suites New Orleans
By - Patrick May
Category - Suites Near New Orleans Sports Venues
Posted By - Homewood Suites New Orleans
Suites Near New Orleans Sports Venues |
With just 66 shopping days left until Christmas, Apple (AAPL) is about to give Santa Claus more goodies to stuff into those stockings.
At
an event Tuesday morning in San Francisco, the Cupertino-based tech
giant is expected to unveil a fifth-generation iPad as well as a
follow-up version of the iPad mini it released a year ago. And while its
email invitation cryptically announces, "We still have a lot to cover,"
one thing is clear: With its stock price well below its onetime high
and its share of the tablet market continuing to shrink, Apple has a lot
riding on this launch.
IDC analyst Tom Mainelli
thinks this week's iPad refresh should help Apple as well as the
burgeoning pack of rivals chipping away at the iPad's former dominance.
"A
new iPad launch always piques consumer interest in the tablet category,
and traditionally that has helped both Apple and its competitors," he
said. After Apple skipped its traditional iPad upgrade last spring,
Mainelli added, "its numbers were down, but almost everyone else's were
down too. So while Apple's market share may have dropped, they still
drive the overall tablet market, and consumers are still paying close
attention to what Apple is doing with its products."
As with past
Apple events, the rumor mill has been working overtime. Most analysts
and bloggers expect the new iPad will sport the more powerful 64-bit A7X
processor and reveal a slimmer physique than its predecessors. KGI
Securities analyst Ming-Chi Kuo says the tablet will be 15 percent
thinner than the iPad 4 and feature more rounded edges.
And since
Apple has historically offered the same features across different
platforms, evidenced by the personal assistant Siri eventually showing
up on both iPhones and iPads, most observers widely believe the
second-version iPad mini will come with the same Retina display that the
larger iPad already features.
One big question is whether either
of the new devices will feature Touch ID, Apple's proprietary
fingerprint identity sensor featured on the new iPhone 5s unveiled last
month. A Chinese blog site leaked photos of a purported
fifth-generation iPad with the sensor in place of the traditional home
button. And analyst Tim Bajarin with Creative Strategies says improving
its tablet's security makes sense as Apple continues to push its devices
into the business world.
"We believe that as an iPad 5 starts
showing up in more and more corporate accounts, and as more employees
are taking their tablets to work with them, security becomes an ever
more important part of the equation," Bajarin said. "And since Apple
owns the Touch ID technology, they could also introduce it on the iPad
mini."
Apple's event comes as the tablet computer plays an
increasingly significant role both in the lives of consumers and in the
way companies conduct business. From iPad-equipped airline pilots and
warehouse managers to schoolteachers and their tablet-toting students,
the device has become a crucial and handy tool for the mobile masses.
IDC
reports that tablet shipments in the fourth quarter are expected for
the first time to surpass total PC shipments, which include desktop and
laptop computers. And it forecasts tablets will do the same on an annual
basis by the end of 2015.
So even though Apple's piece of the
global tablet pie may be smaller than it was in 2010 when the first iPad
went on sale -- a drop from 77 then to 37 percent today -- IDC's
Mainelli says that doesn't necessarily mean Apple's in trouble.
"When
the iPad first launched, nobody was really all that competitive in the
tablet market, so since then
Apple has only had one direction to go, and
that's down" in terms of market share, he said. "Having said that,
Apple doesn't chase market share at the expense of profitability or a
good user experience. So while there are a lot of guys out there making
Android tablets, not a lot of them are making any money.
"At the
end of the day," Mainelli said, "the companies left standing are those
who put out good products that people want and make money doing it."
No comments:
Post a Comment