We're already dipping our toes in November, and there
isn't an iTablet to be found.
Don't blame
Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL). It's not the one
speculating on the portable computing device. Everyone else
seems to be
writing about Apple's tablet, even though the company has
never promised one.
Maybe it's just that it makes too much sense. A year ago,
Steve Jobs saidthat he had no interest in joining the hot
netbook market because Apple "doesn't know how to make a $500
computer that's not a piece of junk, and our DNA will not let
us ship that."
However, now that netbooks, smartphones, and e-book
readers are gaining in popularity, there is a logical push to
create a gadget that consolidates many of these features. A
flat touchscreen Apple device that can check email, display
the morning paper, and stream video of your nephew's birthday
party would be cool, but -- for now -- it's not real.
Apple has never been one to rush a product to market, so
it's a pretty safe bet to cross off an iTablet from your
holiday wish list.
Pity.
Apple is blowing a huge opportunity here. As cool as Apple
may be, it can't afford to drag its feet with what even the
executive editor at
New York Times ' (NYSE: NYT) namesake
publication -- a newspaper giant that would be privy to any
behind-the-scenes chatter of an iTablet with digital reader
intentions -- calls "the impending Apple slate."
Waiting is the hardest part
No matter what any Apple fan may tell you, Apple
doesn't have the luxury of time.
It doesn't have to be first. Even if the iTablet is
similar to
Hewlett-Packard 's (NYSE: HPQ)
new DreamScreen, Apple has earned the right to a
fashionably late entry among its computing peers. Plus, its
scope will be far larger than HP's constrained tablet
entry.
The reason that the clock is ticking on the iTablet is
that the competitive landscape is already shaking out this
holiday season -- with or without Jobs' tardy slip.
Amazon.com (Nasdaq: AMZN) has slashed the
price of its Kindle three times, a
35% haircutsince its debut two years ago. There is no way
that
Barnes & Noble (NYSE: BKS) would be
pricing its
presumably superiorNook at the same $259 price point if
Amazon wasn't trigger happy with its pricing gun. Is this
going to impact Apple's pricing? Yes. The iTablet is going to
cost more -- likely a lot more -- because it's Apple and the
slate will likely do so much more than just display books,
newspapers, and magazines. However, lower prices will help
the Kindle and Nook penetrate the market at a brisk pace.
Once someone invests $259 in an e-book reader, they are
unlikely to make another hardware investment for similar
functionality in the near future. Continued... |