You can spend anywhere from $299 to $929 to buy an iPad this year, but things get very muddled with a mix of old and new. Apple's new iPads. (Credit: James Martin/CNET) The first question I got from several readers, colleagues, and friends yesterday was "so which iPad should I buy?" Many were very smart people who keep up with the ins and outs of technology, which leads me to believe that Apple's new lineup might leave some consumers scratching their heads when faced with a potential purchase this holiday. As with years past, the new lineup is a lot of the old and a bit of new. Last year's iPad mini is $30 cheaper and will stick around, as will 2011's iPad 2 with two 16GB models (one with only Wi-Fi, and one with 3G). New this year are a full-sized iPad -- the iPad Air -- and iPad mini with a Retina Display, with two different screen sizes that are actually the same resolution and contain identical innards. People just pay $100 more if they want the larger screen. Everything else, right down to the battery life, is the same. This, combined with no bump to the amount of baseline storage people get (an important thing for a tablet) sets up a peculiar situation where you can go $100 or so each way and end up with a markedly different device, often with trade-offs. Do the math One example of a trade-off: Want Apple's cheapest tablet? Get the Wi-Fi version of last year's iPad Mini. But it's only 16GB and you can't go higher without upgrading to one of the two newer models, which at 32GB would run either $499 for the Mini, or $599 for the Air. In the case of the Air, that's the price of simply buying a second first-generation iPad Mini. Another example: You want to get one of the newer models, but with cellular and don't want to pay much. Your cheapest option is the 16GB Mini with Retina for $529. But for $70 more, you can get an Air with a larger screen and twice the storage -- however, you're back to Wi-Fi only. There also remains the very top end of the line which runs up to $829 and $929 respectively for the 128GB iPad Mini and Air. The $829 option for even just the latest Mini is within $70 (the price of a leather Smart Cover) of costing the same as a brand new 11-inch MacBook Air from Best Buy. The parts that make the difference now are storage and cellular chips This is not a new thing by any means. Apple became the profits juggernaut it is by offering a "good, better, best" option with its computers and later iPods. The part that's typically made the difference has been storage, RAM, and the optical drives consumers bought for their notebooks and desktop towers (something that's gone kaput). As Apple's business has evolved into tablets and smartphones, the parts that make the biggest difference now are storage and cellular chips, both of which can tweak the price by $100 per tier -- even when Apple's paying far, far less. Case in point: Apple's latest, the iPhone 5S. According to a teardown by IHS iSuppli last month, that same 16GB of NAND flash memory-- which is the entry point of storage on all of Apple's tablets since 2010's iPad 1 -- runs an estimated $9.40. Bumping up to 32GB costs $18.80, while going up to 64GB costs $29 total. Those same upgrades cost users $100 for each tier on the iPads, meaning consumers pay more than 10 times what it likely cost Apple. It's a similar story for the cellular chips that users pay an extra $100 for if they want to connect to cellular networks. Those same chips only run around $25.60 for the iPad 2, iSuppli says, while the newer 4G LTE chips cost about $41.50. Third-generation iPads piled up at Apple's San Francisco store during the product's launch last March. (Credit: James Martin/CNET) What people are actually buying This $100 per step upgrade has gone on for years and worked out very well for Apple's business, but perhaps has never made such a difference as with these tablets, which are priced so close together. With notebooks, which could run between $1,000 up to $3,000, there was more wiggle room for such parts, something that makes more of a difference with gadgets that cost less. The reality is that most people buy the mid-range version of the iPad, or at least they were early last year. A report covering three months of 2012 holiday iPad sales by Consumer Intelligence Research Partners suggested that the 32GB model of the iPad 2 accounted for 49 percent of all sales, with the 16GB model following at 31 percent. Of course two new models and the iPad Mini have been released since then, making the comparison less than ideal. Looking at something more recent, gadget trade-in service Gazelle says that 16GB iPads have made up 41.8 percent of all iPad models traded in since its program started. Last year alone that mix was a tad lower, with 16GB iPads accounting for 38.38 percent of trade-ins, a figure that jumped to 46.88 percent of trades so far this year. Apple, to its credit, has removed some of the need for lots of storage on its devices, with things like iCloud, Photo Stream, and iTunes Match and iTunes Radio for streaming and storing music tracks. Still, there's no debating the fact that apps, games, videos and especially magazines can all take up incredible amounts of storage, very quickly. There's also little debating that while some could see potential consumer confusion in Apple's myriad iPad offerings, the results could be increased sales come this holiday shopping season. "The new iPad Air is a very attractive upgrade," Barclays Capital's Ben Reitzes told investors on Tuesday, adding that the firm's original estimate that Apple would surpass 20 million iPads sold over the next two months was "conservative."

Posted by : Unknown Wednesday, October 23, 2013

You can spend anywhere from $299 to $929 to buy an iPad this year, but things get very muddled with a mix of old and new.



Apple's new iPads.

Apple's new iPads.


(Credit: James Martin/CNET)

The first question I got from several readers, colleagues, and friends yesterday was "so which iPad should I buy?"


Many were very smart people who keep up with the ins and outs of technology, which leads me to believe that Apple's new lineup might leave some consumers scratching their heads when faced with a potential purchase this holiday.


As with years past, the new lineup is a lot of the old and a bit of new. Last year's iPad mini is $30 cheaper and will stick around, as will 2011's iPad 2 with two 16GB models (one with only Wi-Fi, and one with 3G).


New this year are a full-sized iPad -- the iPad Air -- and iPad mini with a Retina Display, with two different screen sizes that are actually the same resolution and contain identical innards. People just pay $100 more if they want the larger screen. Everything else, right down to the battery life, is the same.


This, combined with no bump to the amount of baseline storage people get (an important thing for a tablet) sets up a peculiar situation where you can go $100 or so each way and end up with a markedly different device, often with trade-offs.


Do the math

One example of a trade-off: Want Apple's cheapest tablet? Get the Wi-Fi version of last year's iPad Mini. But it's only 16GB and you can't go higher without upgrading to one of the two newer models, which at 32GB would run either $499 for the Mini, or $599 for the Air. In the case of the Air, that's the price of simply buying a second first-generation iPad Mini.


Another example: You want to get one of the newer models, but with cellular and don't want to pay much. Your cheapest option is the 16GB Mini with Retina for $529. But for $70 more, you can get an Air with a larger screen and twice the storage -- however, you're back to Wi-Fi only.


There also remains the very top end of the line which runs up to $829 and $929 respectively for the 128GB iPad Mini and Air. The $829 option for even just the latest Mini is within $70 (the price of a leather Smart Cover) of costing the same as a brand new 11-inch MacBook Air from Best Buy.


The parts that make the difference now are storage and cellular chips


This is not a new thing by any means. Apple became the profits juggernaut it is by offering a "good, better, best" option with its computers and later iPods. The part that's typically made the difference has been storage, RAM, and the optical drives consumers bought for their notebooks and desktop towers (something that's gone kaput). As Apple's business has evolved into tablets and smartphones, the parts that make the biggest difference now are storage and cellular chips, both of which can tweak the price by $100 per tier -- even when Apple's paying far, far less.


Case in point: Apple's latest, the iPhone 5S. According to a teardown by IHS iSuppli last month, that same 16GB of NAND flash memory-- which is the entry point of storage on all of Apple's tablets since 2010's iPad 1 -- runs an estimated $9.40. Bumping up to 32GB costs $18.80, while going up to 64GB costs $29 total. Those same upgrades cost users $100 for each tier on the iPads, meaning consumers pay more than 10 times what it likely cost Apple.


It's a similar story for the cellular chips that users pay an extra $100 for if they want to connect to cellular networks. Those same chips only run around $25.60 for the iPad 2, iSuppli says, while the newer 4G LTE chips cost about $41.50.


Third-generation iPads piled up at Apple's San Francisco store during the product's launch last March.

Third-generation iPads piled up at Apple's San Francisco store during the product's launch last March.


(Credit: James Martin/CNET)

What people are actually buying

This $100 per step upgrade has gone on for years and worked out very well for Apple's business, but perhaps has never made such a difference as with these tablets, which are priced so close together. With notebooks, which could run between $1,000 up to $3,000, there was more wiggle room for such parts, something that makes more of a difference with gadgets that cost less.


The reality is that most people buy the mid-range version of the iPad, or at least they were early last year. A report covering three months of 2012 holiday iPad sales by Consumer Intelligence Research Partners suggested that the 32GB model of the iPad 2 accounted for 49 percent of all sales, with the 16GB model following at 31 percent. Of course two new models and the iPad Mini have been released since then, making the comparison less than ideal.


Looking at something more recent, gadget trade-in service Gazelle says that 16GB iPads have made up 41.8 percent of all iPad models traded in since its program started. Last year alone that mix was a tad lower, with 16GB iPads accounting for 38.38 percent of trade-ins, a figure that jumped to 46.88 percent of trades so far this year.


Apple, to its credit, has removed some of the need for lots of storage on its devices, with things like iCloud, Photo Stream, and iTunes Match and iTunes Radio for streaming and storing music tracks. Still, there's no debating the fact that apps, games, videos and especially magazines can all take up incredible amounts of storage, very quickly.


There's also little debating that while some could see potential consumer confusion in Apple's myriad iPad offerings, the results could be increased sales come this holiday shopping season.


"The new iPad Air is a very attractive upgrade," Barclays Capital's Ben Reitzes told investors on Tuesday, adding that the firm's original estimate that Apple would surpass 20 million iPads sold over the next two months was "conservative."



Translate

Like fanpage

Popular Post

Blog Archive

Powered by Blogger.

- Copyright © News and design logo -Metrominimalist- Powered by Blogger - Designed by Johanes Djogan -