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Zetter: Many of us know that story. Apple is obviously leading the field in both innovative design and sales for tablets. What are other tablet OEMs doing to differentiate their tablet offerings to meet specific use cases for consumers? And how is tablet connectivity, Wi-Fi versus cellular, playing a role in tablet differentiation?
Palma: Well, it’s really about crafting the user experience. There are several classes. The way we’ve looked at it over the past year or two, there’s been the iPad and the iPad wannabes, by trying to position a high-end consumer experience on a tablet with leading edge technologies.
And then there’s been the very entry-level side of the market, priced at $100, maybe $150, using older generation processors, with the main goal of presenting some decent video on the screen for the consumer.
In that, what we call the iPad wannabe, the high-end consumer consumption space. There, it’s been difficult to craft a solution that really is compelling.
“With Apple, a lot of the risk is mitigated because they know they’ve got the demand. They know that for every device they ship, someone will buy it.”
–Michael Palma
The things they’ve focused on are even better than Apple graphics on the screen, to present a high-end gaming platform. That’s been one issue. Second has been about a broader range of applications.
And other issues are trying to shift some things about the user interface; presenting more camera opportunities, presenting larger or better screens, or smaller screens. Apple is still, through three generations, one screen size.
So in some of the other spaces, with Android they’ve been pulling different levers to try and craft products that are more suitable to maybe a slightly narrower field of audience. Get the right size. Get a smaller size.
And then there’s the price. But really, the big shake-up has come from Amazon, who really undercut the price.
[Kindle Fire] Came out at $200, using an older version of Android. But the focus on connecting to the content the consumer would want to get is the main thesis behind the Kindle Fire. And I think that was probably the right approach.
The key issue is how do you make it better for the user to do the things that they want to do? And that’s been the challenge up until now in the Android marketplace, competing for that high-end price.
Starting end of late last year, beginning of this year, you started seeing some more experimentation with the form factor.
So you see ASUS came out with several products that combine the keyboard with the tablet in some form factor so that they can convert and you can use it as a, if not a PC replacement, kind of like a PC with a keyboard for when you have to do more typing for your email, or if you want to use the tablet in some more forms of creative activities rather than consumptive activities.
But it’s those things that are going to impact the user experience or are the things that are really going to drive the differentiation.
And of those things…where you’re just trying to compete on price, or in some technical specification…generally the market has not been too favorable with those solutions.
Next out will be, with the Windows tablets, can you link to your legacy PC software and have that, and be able to consume it, on a tablet? And that will be the question. Is that a compelling use case study that’s going to drive customers to adopt that technology?
Zetter: Yeah, I know Apple’s done a great job of having all of their products link across the enterprise, which has been a tremendous ease of use and selling feature.
Let’s talk about the tablet value chain.
We have the tablet OEMs on the left, the tablet application semiconductor firms in the middle, and then moving to the right, you have the manufacturing relationships with EMS and ODM companies.
Right now Apple seems to be the only company with its own semiconductor processing power in its tablet. What does this level of vertical integration mean for Apple? And what does Apple’s position, therein, mean for competing tablet makers?
And then what changes do you see on the horizon for the tablet value chain?
Palma: Well, I think what Apple did, when they invested in building up the semiconductor design capability, they had a sense of what they needed for their customers to be successful. And they weren’t saying it was from the apps processor suppliers.
And they also valued – there’s a lot of other auxiliary benefits, but really what they were looking for was an element that was highly tuned to their needs.
And so they’d throw out a design team to try and get the right level of performance, the right level of power consumption, and then they’d source that with foundries. It’s been with Samsung and now, it’s with TSMC. It’s a large gamble to design your own processor.
Again with Apple, a lot of the risk is mitigated because they know they’ve got the demand. They know that for every device they ship, someone will buy it. And that is a tremendously empowering fact, or assumption, that hopefully it continues.
It allows them to take those risks and design their own processors because the cost of designing the processors – now that we’re moving to the 28 nanometer – are growing significantly. It’s not exponentially.
For each new prototype you bring in and design, it gets to a place where many companies just cannot support the development costs anymore.
But with Apple, with its fan base locked in, being able to reuse that silicon on a number of different platforms – the same processor is in the iPhone and the Apple TV over-the-top video box and the iPod Touch – they can get to those scales.
Just on the iPhone alone, they can get to the scale they need, not to mention the iPad. And they think that they can optimize at the supply chain, optimize the design elements they made. And they’re in a position to do that, unlike most OEMs.
Zetter: Looking at the value chain for tablets, the PC and computing market [segment] represents the largest revenue segment for ODM and EMS business. Which EMS and ODM companies do you see benefiting from this changing tablet or computing landscape? Surely there are some very profitable opportunities for companies like Hon Hai and Quanta?
Palma: Well, that’s a good question. There is, in the EMS industry, where you’ve seen in the last couple quarters, just the growth of the consumer segment…
Overall, consumers are about 33 percent of the marketplace, where the computing sector is about 35 percent. So in Q4, thanks to a weak PC market with the HDV shortage, and a strong rebounding smart phone and tablet market, we almost saw the consumer segment overtake the computer segment within the EMS / ODM industry.
When you look at it from the EMS versus ODM firms, the mix is different. But we really saw the growth of this, and we think it’s only going to continue.
So, right now, the key ODM and EMS companies for the tablet market space have been Hon Hai – they’ve had the iPad and several other tablets.
And in Quanta, who had a good early ramp with RIM, and then even more so now with the Kindle Fire.
Inventec’s had some problems. They were building for the HP tablet on webOS that had died on delivery and then revived itself as the Zombie tablet.
Zetter: They did the Nook as well, right? The Barnes and Noble tablet?
Palma: Yeah, they’ve had some of the activity with Barnes and Noble, as well. That’s been one success area for them. And there have been other companies, but the largest three have been Hon Hai, Quanta and Inventech.
And then there have been a scattering with Compal and ESC, and Pegatron has some work for ASUS. And it’s rumored that Apple may second source the iPad to Pegatron. That hasn’t happened yet.
But what we’re going to see is when Windows 8 tablets come out, much more, we think a lot more business will come out of the PC ODM business.
So, Quanta’s already well established. They’re experienced with its frames. It’s a different build scenario than with a PC – to get something into something under an inch thick, integrated with the display, at low cost, with some other nice finishes – and make it attractive for a consumer product.
But, we think Hon Hai is well positioned. We think Quanta is. And we think Wistron and Compal will come up and join Pegatron – sort of in that top tier. Inventech, we’d expect would have the opportunity to build its presence in the marketplace.
And then the question is, will we see some of the other major EMS players, the Flextronics or Jabil, come in?
Flextronics excited the notebook ODM business. But they’ve got a significant experience around smart phones, and that makes it curious to see if they’ll come in on the tablet rush and can win business in that space.
The same with Jabil. Jabil has some upstream components that might be able to play at this, and maybe not. And then we’ll see if another major EMS company can stake its ground in the tablet space.
Zetter: Moving back with this expanding role of the tablet, where we started this conversation, the tablet’s role is expanding beyond just content consumption for users. How do you see ways the tablet’s use is being expanded on currently? And what ways do you see users redefining what that tablet will be in the next five years?
Palma: Up until now, the tablet space has been kind of like a gold rush mentality. Everyone’s chasing the opportunity that Apple really identified and tapped into. So what we expect to see is another round of evolution in the marketplace over the next year.
Right now, as I said, there’s sort of the iPad, sort of the high-end content consumption tablets, and then the entry-level products that are out there.
We’ve seen the Kindle Fire and now the Nook effectively take the price point for a non-Apple content consumption machine, to $200 – $250.
We’ve seen the experiments in the $100, $150 range show that even consumers in China are looking for a better user experience. We see those coming up a little bit from maybe the sub-150 to maybe the $150 to $200 price point – bringing out better processors; better graphics, better user interface, better power management.
I think that’s sort of the traditional core space of the tablets. Then what we’re seeing is the next level.
A group out of England has come up with a tablet for the education market in India priced at about $35, subsidized by the Indian government. But even at an unsubsidized price, around $55 is the target. A very stripped-down, basic version of a tablet at that ultra-low cost.
We’re seeing some mainstream functionality happening at around the $100 price point, on a par with some of the higher-end solutions, using a MIPS architecture instead of the most common and prevalent ARM architecture, coming into the marketplace. And that’s enabling some choices at the $100 price point.
And then as we move up that chain, we’re really starting to see Windows 8 tablets, whether they’re on x86 from Intel, or on ARM, we can see them coming up by the end of this year, early next year, at a price point somewhere above an entry-level iPad. So, $600 to $700-range, maybe.
And that really starts to blur the lines between PCs and tablets. We’re expecting to see a lot of new products in that area.
And then it’s around the form factor. Do you have a keyboard attached? How is it attached? Is it always there in a clamshell format? Does it slide? Does it detach? Is it something you can get at when you arrive at your hotel at night and just plug in via USB port? We see those things happening.
And then from that success, we see tablets really moving into the enterprise. And then from the enterprise into vertical applications, so the tablets get ruggedized.
They will support a wider temperature range than you see in a normal consumer tablet and other environmental conditions they’re ruggedized for.
So, in the end, we see a lot more market segments developing in the marketplace, each with different user scenarios.
As you mentioned, yes, up until now it’s been about content consumption, primarily.
But we’re going to see tablets for social network; for content creation, for video conferencing, displaying presentations.
It really comes down to the imagination of the technology providers, to combine greater processing capability; greater levels of connectivity, and greater creativity in the use of sensors – from the touch screen to voice recognition to cameras to gyroscopes – to tell you how you’re holding the tablet.
All that to combine and be able to process that information in real time to impact how you’re actually using the machine so you see the information you want to see.
You’re presented the options that you want to look at. And that really transforms what we do with our technology today, and really sets the bar for what’s next.
Zetter: Again, we’re talking with Michael Palma, research manager, consumer device semiconductors, and electronics manufacturing services (EMS) with leading technology research and consulting firm, IDC. Michael, thank you.
Palma: Thank you, Mark.
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