TABLETS SIZE MATTERS
Tablets
are the hottest sellers of this decade. But is there an ideal screen size?
IT’S THE hottest category in the
world! Everyone wants a tablet, but which one? Thankfully, the difference
between most tablets is fading. Almost all of them come with great processors,
ever-improving battery life, fantastic form factors and amazing apps and
utilities. The big question that remains is, what size screen is best? And that
is becoming an increasingly baffling and a very confounding question!
HAPPINESS IS A TABLE PC The Lenovo
IdeaCentre Horizon Table PC is an innovative Windows 8 device
Most people will break down tablet
screen sizes into three: 7-inch, 8-inch and 10-inch. That would be mistake
number one. If you are really serious about buying a tablet and getting the
perfect one suited for your tasks – the tablet screen-size breakdown is actually
five size categories. Let me take you through all of them.
WHEN I GROW UP I WANT TO BE...
When phablets came, people snickered
and laughed. Today, millions of phablet sales later, they are all wiping the
egg off their faces! Phablets are increasingly getting the most attention and
innovation in the field. But can they play the role of a tablet? In their
current iteration – no way, as a tablet is much more than just a larger screen
smartphone. But future phablets are starting to look amazingly good. At 6.1
inches, full 1920x1080 HD screens, almost zero bezel around the display, 8 core
processors, additional whiz-bang graphic processors, battery life better than
any smartphone and enhanced functionality, including intelligent stylus
features – this is going to be the personal tablet of choice.
Pros and cons: You’ll be able to do
anything you do with a normal-sized tablet, except that you’ll be squinting a
little. And you can’t use it as a sharing device. It’s yours and yours alone.
THE TIPPING POINT EFFECT
The 7-inchers came in as the poor
man’s tablet but have eventually become the reason tablet sales rocketed. Low
prices, underpowered, resistive screens, suicidal battery life – they still
sold like hot cakes. That’s because they have many compelling reasons going for
them. Easy to hold in one hand, fits your palm, easy to carry, can be pocketed,
perfect fit for a bag, thin and light and very aggressive pricing. In fact, the
pricing on these is almost comical now and will only get more amazing with Google,
Asus and Acer going all out in this space. The next generation will have great
processing power, higher resolution screens and even lower prices – always a
good combination.
Pros and cons: Better as e-readers,
good for quick browsing, great for social networking; but completely suck when
you want to watch a special-effects movie or play a graphic-intensive game. And
forget about making presentations on this one. It may not be around for too
long.
IF YOU BUILD IT, THEY WILL COME
This is that strange screen size
that shouldn’t have worked – and yet may well become the category killer – 7.9
or 8 inches is the future. Why? Well, the screen-size ratio works better for
most things you’ll do on a tablet – it gives you just that much more screen
space so that you don’t squint and more importantly, Apple makes the iPad Mini
in this size and is selling sackloads of them, thus others have to follow. Lots
of action here as Apple will bring in a retina display in the iPad Mini 2, most
7-inch tablets will move to this size in the future with similar specs and
prices here again will spiral downwards.
Pros and cons: It doesn’t really fit
your palm well, but as most are super-thin you can still manage. Games and
movies fit perfectly on this and the battery life is better here. It also
breaks up the confounding clutter of the 7-inch tablet market and that is a big
deal.
THE KING IS DEAD, LONG LIVE THE KING
The 9.7 or 10-incher is what started
the whole thing off. It’s still a great choice, but may not be the way to go if
you’re a new tablet buyer. Why do I say that? Well, the best tablet is a tablet
that is always with you when you need one – and this isn’t the easiest one to
carry. While you do see people walking around with one encased in an ugly,
thick, padded cover even at parties – it’s just not practical in the long run.
While it’s early days yet – expect this category to wean off eventually.
Pros and cons: This is still the
best for movies, games, presentations as well as sharing – but you’ll do it
mostly in your home and not on the move. A 10-inch tablet will become the
choice of corporates as well as the screen you’ll snap off an ultrabook hybrid,
while consumers will move to the 8-inch model.
THE FUTURE, NOW
The most exciting space in tablets
may well be one that most people haven’t experienced as yet. I call this the
Family Tablet or Desktop Tablet. This will be around 27 to 32 inches, will be
an all-in-one PC, will run about three hours on battery, can be propped up
straight and used as a desktop with a wireless keyboard and mouse, or flattened
and put on a table or even stand for the whole family to play games and use
apps customised for it (think Microsoft Surface for 1/10th the price), can be
used in the family room for TV and movies (they’ll come with fantastic premium
audio and graphics) and will also be a gaming and presentation machine par
excellence.
Pros and cons: It’s all good and
it’s what every family will own soon. You’ll see major action from Lenovo, Asus
and HP in this area.
Like I said right in the beginning,
tablets are the hot-ticket item of this decade and they are coming out to get
you from five different directions. Never has size mattered more! Well, that
may not be entirely true, but then that’s a whole different column.
- Rajiv Makhni Rajiv HTBR130224
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