The Rise and Fall of Android Tablets
One of the most exciting stories in the modern
tech industry is that of tablets. Back in 2010, when the touchscreen smartphone
revolution was in full swing, the introduction of iPad by Apple sparked immense
interest in tablets. After all, we were getting accustomed to touch devices
fully, and a large touchscreen not only seemed futuristic but also promised a
lot of real-world uses. There is a huge difference in the smartphones used
during the early days and the ones being used now.
These screens posed a challenge for many
real-world scenarios. Actions, such as typing and media consumption weren’t
exactly pleasing. But tablets, with its giant screens, seemed like the answer
to those woes. With their large screens, watching movies, typing on virtual
keyboards and playing mobile games would become so much more appealing. Even
web browsing would be a breeze on a large screen. Students looking for a
dissertation writing service would not need to power up a PC to search for the
service.
At one time, tablets were so popular that they
were perceived as the tech that would make laptops obsolete. We know now that
this notion was quite far-fetched, and it failed miserably. The tablet market
today is almost dead, even with Apple’s iPad being quite popular. Probably the
biggest failure in the tablet market has been that of Android tablets. Today,
what used to be a thriving space of Android tablets has been reduced to just a
handful of options. The hope for Android tablets has diminished to the point
that Google itself stopped supporting its latest Android tablet, and announced
its exit from the tablet market.
Poor Tablet Optimisation
Probably the biggest reason for the downfall of
Android is the platform’s fragmentation. To understand that, we need to know
how Apple and its iOS differs from Android. Unlike Android, Apple is a company
that’s much more closed off. It controls its software and hardware itself. By
being in control of every aspect of its devices, Apple can optimise everything
correctly. That is why iPad is such a hit even today, with it enjoying the
significant tablet market share.
The story is quite different on the Android side
of things. Android is an open-source operating system. What this essentially
means is that anyone can take Android, make some customisations, and install it
on their device. The way Google makes money from Android is by offering its
services over Android. Anyway, what Android’s open-source nature means for
Android is that it doesn’t have as much control over it as Apple has with its
OS.
For earlier tablets, Google made the mistake of
running the same version of Android on tablets as it did on phones. But Android
software wasn’t optimised for the large tablet screens. And neither were the
apps available at the time; this inevitably led to usability issues. Google did
try to fix the problem by introducing a version of Android specially made for
tablets. While it was a perfect response from Google, it posed another
challenge.
App developers who had already been making apps
for Android smartphones and the Android OS running on it didn’t warm up to the
idea of making their apps compatible with another version of Android for
tablets. Due to the added cost of developing apps for different versions of the
same OS, many developers opted to forego optimising apps for tablets altogether
and focused on smartphones itself. After all, the majority of users had
smartphones. Hence the potential to earn more came from smartphones.
The Rise of Phablets
The original appeal of tablets was always a way of
getting the best of both worlds, laptops and mobile phones. Tablets were meant
to be a medium between the two. But when Samsung took a gamble and launched its
Note series with an at the time substantial 5-inch screen, it was an instant
hit. The popularity of Note series can be seen as a significant contributing
factor to Android tablets’ downfall. It proved that users didn’t want to carry
around two devices, which mostly did the same thing, just in different sizes.
Smartphones with larger screens meant that users could do everything they did
on a tablet, on the phone itself.
2-in-1s
Another contributing factor to Android tablets’
downfall was the rise of 2-in-1 laptops. 2-in-1 laptops are, as the name
implies, an amalgamation of a computer and a tablet. They are necessarily
tablets with attachable docks or keyboards. They are great productivity tools
and are much more portable than laptops. Media consumption is still high,
thanks to the large screen size. Just like Phablets became a perfect medium
between tablets and smartphones, the 2-in-1 laptops became an ideal medium
between laptops and tablets.
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The Rise and Fall of Android Tablets
One of the most exciting stories in the modern tech industry is that of tablets. Back in 2010, when the touchscreen smartphone revolution ...
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