LG is choosing to focus on Android smartphones, and hence has
decided not add to its Android-powered Optimus Pad tablet, which debuted at the
Mobile World Congress in Spain last year. To those who have forgotten this
particular tablet, the Optimus Pad has an 8.9-inch
screen, dual-facing 5MP cameras, 32GB of storage and a 3D camera for taking
photos or videos.
“We’ve decided to put all new tablet development on the back
burner for the time being in order to focus on smartphones,” said Ken Hong,
LG’s global communications director.
In truth, this announcement is not overly surprising given LG’s
lack of products in the tablet arena, but it does illustrate just how badly LG
has failed in a market where Samsung – its great domestic rival for making TV
and display monitors – has become so prominent.
Nonetheless, LG will still retain some presence in the tablet
market, as its LG Display subsidiary is a heavyweight in the tablet display
space. Indeed, the firm supplied display panels to Apple for the iPad 1 and
iPad 2, and market researcheriSuppli claimed late last year
that LG Display supplies around one in two tablet displays.
m;ma� - i p� Ю ;margin-bottom:12.0pt;
margin-left:6.7pt;line-height:18.0pt;background:white'>Forrester Research estimates that real-time bidding will
constitute 18% of the online display-ad market this year, up from 13% last
year.
"It's gone from virtually zero in 2009 to about a fifth of
the entire market right now," said Michael Greene, a Forrester senior
analyst. "We've moved from a traditional advertising model of buying 1,000
impressions. Now you evaluate and buy a single impression."
To make the auctions work, advertising companies are racing to
place tracking technology on as many websites as possible. That technology gives
them user and Web-page data to sell in the auction.
Krux in its latest study found that more than 300 companies
collected data about users, up from 167 companies in 2010. The latest figure
easily topped the 131 companies that The Wall Street Journal identified in a
2010 survey of tracking on the 50 most-visited websites.
More than half the time, Krux found that data collectors were
piggybacking on each other. For example, when a user visited a website that had
code for one tracking technology, the data collection would call out to and
trigger other tracking technologies that weren't embedded on the site. As a
result of such piggybacking, websites often don't know how much data are being
collected about their users.
"It may be the first medium where the buyers have more
information about the price, the value and the amount of inventory than the
seller," said Krux President Gordon McLeod.
j �
y e p� Ю B of storage. Microsoft
said they would be priced at a similar rate to other tablets using the same
type of processor built by other firms.
It added that the
Intel-based versions would be offered with either 64GB or 128GB of storage and
would have price tags comparable to ultrabook laptops.
Different
chipsets
One tech analyst told
the BBC that other hardware makers were likely to feel aggrieved by the news.
"Microsoft can offer
a competitive price for these specifications as it doesn't need to pay itself a
licence for the Windows 8 software which other manufacturers will have to do,
and that might make its PC and tablet-making partners unhappy," said
Carolina Milanesi, research vice president at the technology consultants
Gartner.
She added that the
firm appeared to have focused on a specific part of the market which wanted a
more powerful device than the iPad.
"They seem to be
be targeting a professional audience," she said.
"So they are
going head-to-head with Apple within the corporate sector. Price will be key -
these devices won't be at the bottom end of the market. They will probably let
other manufacturers fight over that space."
By contrast the tech
research firm Forrester said it thought the focus for ARM-based Surface tablets
would be consumers, rather than the enterprise sector.
But one of its
analysts warned there was a risk customers would shy away if they found it
confusing distinguishing between the two types of Windows 8 experience. This
will be the first time Microsoft will offer a version of its PC system designed
for chips based on ARM's architecture.
"Microsoft will
be its own worst enemy in this market,"blogged Sarah Rotman Epps.
"Consumers aren't
used to thinking about chipsets. Choice is a key tenet of Windows, but too much
choice is overwhelming for consumers. Apple gets this, and limits iPad options
to connectivity, storage, and black… or white."
ARM's ambitions
Despite the potential
for confusion, British chip designer ARM said it was "excited" by the
news.
The firm's designs
have already proved popular with smartphone makers, but Microsoft's support for
its technology in Windows 8 offers it the potential to expand into a market
dominated until now by Intel and AMD.
"This represents
a significant milestone in Microsoft's journey to expand the support of the
Windows operating system and embrace the ARM architecture," said Lance
Howarth, the firm's vice president of marketing.
"With the Surface
for Windows RT announcement we are delighted to see yet another example of this
partnership in action which follows on from various Windows RT devices
demonstrated at Taiwan's Computex show recently."
Intel said it was also
"pleased" about Microsoft's move.
"Intel believes
in and supports an open and healthy ecosystem that delivers a broad scale of
innovation and choice in solutions and user experiences," a statement
said.
"We also believe
Windows 8 on Intel architecture will deliver the most complete experience with
the best performance and compatibility across all computing platforms."
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