Eight ways Android and Linux tablets can beat Apple’s iPad
Jan 28, 2010 — by LinuxDevices Staff — from the LinuxDevices Archive — 27 views[Updated, Jan. 29] — Apple's newly announced iPad has been touted as “magical,” “amazing,” and “revolutionary” by company officials. But, key deficiencies in the device provide opportunities for competitors, who can craft better tablets that run Linux or Android.
It's not necessary to say much about the good aspects of the iPad, because they've been covered ad nauseam elsewhere, often with almost messianic fervor. The gadget (right) is a 9.7-inch tablet computer, featuring a multi-touch screen and employing a 1GHz "A4" CPU (a result of Apple's 2008 acquisition of P.A. Semi), that, like the smaller iPod Touch, runs a version of the iPhone operating system.
Apparently beating all industry records for hyperbole, Apple's website touts the device as a "magical and revolutionary device at an unbelievable price." Key highlights are said to be: the iPad's 1.5-pound weight (1.6 pounds with optional 3G connectivity) and 0.5-inch thickness; its use of IPS (in-plane switching) technology, claimed to improve the screen's color accuracy and viewing angles; and battery life of "up to ten hours."
Notably, the iPad runs the iPhone OS, and is claimed to run "almost all" of the applications — more than 140,000, Apple says — already written for the iPhone and IPod Touch. Apple also announced $10, iPad-specific productivity apps, Pages, Keynote, and Numbers, which respectively provide word processing, presentation, and spreadsheet functionality.
No non-Apple device can run iPhone apps, giving the iPad a key advantage. Apart from this, however, the iPad breaks relatively little new ground. Tablets (or "slates") were all the rage this year at CES, but for years, many vendors have created tablet computers for Linux, various Windows CE and Windows Mobile flavors, and more recently, the Linux-based Android platform. (For a comprehensive look at what's already out there, see our regularly updated Linux-powered mobile tablets, webpads, UMPCs, and MIDs showcase.)
Tablets with screen sizes comparable to the iPad's have typically employed x86 processors and full-blown desktop OSes, which takes them out of the running where battery life and ease of use are concerned. But many smaller devices — historically burdened with the MID (mobile internet device) moniker — have already combined touchscreen displays with ARM processors and either Linux or Windows CE. Many also deliver iPad-like battery life.
Now, such devices are posed for further evolution, thanks to the release of SoCs (system on chips) such as Nvidia's recently announced Tegra 250. The new Tegra incorporates a dual-core version of ARM's Cortex-A9, decoding and encoding HD video while offering "days of battery life." Nvidia further claims twice the graphics performance of the previous generation Tegras, plus support for OpenGL ES 2.0 and hardware acceleration for Adobe's Flash 10.1.
ICD's Android-based Ultra tablet
Eight ways other tablets can beat the iPad
Apple supporters will claim that no competing tablet could offer the "iPad experience," no matter how similar the underlying hardware. However, we believe that thanks to a number of gaffes, the iPad may be less successful than expected. Below is a list of eight problems with the iPad that provide opportunities for competitors.
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We could have padded out the above list to at least ten items by criticizing the iPad's looks (ugly large bezel), OS limitations (apart from no multitasking and reliance on iTunes, apps will only run full-screen), lack of a removable battery (of course, that's par for the course from Apple), or reliance on the beleaguered AT&T data network.
However, the eight deficiencies cited above provide manufacturers with plenty of ways to create a variety of iPad-beating devices.
Availability
For more details of Apple's iPad, see Apple's website, here, and coverage by our sister publication eWEEK, here, and with a more negative slant, here. Meanwhile, for the official Linux Foundation iPad slam, try out Jim Zemlin's latest blog, here.
This article was originally published on LinuxDevices.com and has been donated to the open source community by QuinStreet Inc. Please visit LinuxToday.com for up-to-date news and articles about Linux and open source.