Apple’s iPad and Amazon’s Kindle are effectively two sides of the same coin. They are highly portable in their own right, and they are well-connected, meaning the information they need to make them useful is highly portable as well. Of course e-readers and tablets are different devices – they are aimed at different markets, have differing capabilities and perform different, but related, functions.
It should be no surprise that the sales of both are similar. Apple has sold about 3.5 million iPads. Amazon has sold about 3 million Kindles if analyst reports are correct. And, of course, there are other e-readers also selling well. The iPad costs quite a bit more than the Kindle, but it does more, so again, no surprise. But in reality the story of tablet computing goes beyond the iPad or the e-readers.
But it’s what’s going to happen next that matters most. Once the tablet format becomes generally available, and more fully capable of being integrated into the enterprise, you can expect that it will form a new niche for hardware at your company. It’s similar in some ways to what happened when laptop computers started becoming affordable enough to take the place of desktop computers – they started selling in huge numbers and have now topped the older format in sales. Tablets will eventually do this to laptops.
But this does not mean that tablet computers will kill off laptop computers, any more than laptops got rid of desktop machines. They will coexist and form a third tier of hardware that you will need to support, and that will need to become part of your enterprise. But you can be assured that they will come.
The reason, of course, is that the people who work for your company need information readily available, and they need access to that information if they are to keep up with the pace of business. With the business world moving to a 24 x 7 model, the people who live in this world need information all of the time. This is why they’ve bought laptop computers in record numbers and why they will buy tablet computers in numbers that are at least as large.
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