I am not sure why there has to be a "war". McDonalds may be the largest burger 'restaurant' but that doesn't mean they are the best. I have a feeling anyone can make a better burger (or tofu burger) than McDonalds.
Sure, the "war" helps drive innovation. But, sometimes it's just innovation for innovation sake and not really providing value. Such as HDMI output on smartphones. I'm guessing less than 0.01% of people care about that one.
Anyway, I like my iPad/iPhone/OS X experience. I'm happy and that is all that matters to me in the end when I buy something. I had played with some Samsung products using Android (since I was going to port some of my iOS applications over) and I was completely disappointed. I passed that development onto someone else. :-)
Anyway, to each his/her own! I'm pretty sure more people buy Honda cars than BMW or Tesla and that doesn't mean BMW or Tesla are losing the car wars.
I own a Nexus 7 (2012), which sadly doesn't have HDMI output, otherwise I would happily use it.
I could use it to easily watch movies/shows on my TV, without having to resort to a computer (not everyone has an HTPC behind their TV, and a tablet is way easier to move than a laptop/desktop).
I could just fire up an emulator (emulations on mobile devices is great those days, you can emulate pretty much every console older than the psx), connect a wireless/Bluetooth controller to it, and use it as a nice, portable "retro"-console.
Returning on your article, I totally agree with your last point. Because chocolate ice cream sell better, it doesn't mean that vanilla ice cream is losing the "ice cream war".
On an iPad you don't need HDMI, you have airplay. Sure you need an extra $99 device, but no fiddling with cables, fixed cabling for my TV setup. That's FAR superior to any HDMI connection on any tablet. I do have a 30pin -> HDMI convertor for my iPad2, but ended up never using it because of the cable mess. And with Apple's weird pricing, an AppleTV wasn't that much more expensive than the HDMI connector for the iPad...
Oh how I wish there were more (vocal) Apple users like you. I find the 'war' mentality is usually very strong in the fanboi type, not to say that the anti-Apple specifically pro-open-source group aren't almost as vocal.
The most important thing isn't to belong to a group of users, but to use what you like best. Why should I care what anybody else uses if it suits their needs. Why do so many people think they know what is best for other people to use?
I've used this stance many times when (my brother in particular) gives me a hard-time for having a Windows Phone, or using Ubuntu on my dev machine, etc. etc. But the mocking keeps coming.
I've never used the HDMI on my phone but I have on my tablet. I love being able to load an SD card with movies via my computer, insert the SD card into my tablet and go. Works great on planes and anywhere else that streaming is not possible. And if I am in a location where I can watch something on a larger screen, I can use the HDMI output instead. IMO, it is unfortunate that Apple never embraced the idea of alternative I/O.
But I agree that this doesn't have to be a war with only one winner. In my house, we've both Android and iOS devices. And everybody sees pros/cons of their devices of choice.
HDMI is a great feature, to bad there are many anti-features that are required to be there by regulation as a dependency. It would be a real shame if the telecom players lost any power over their customers, if cell phones became a useful replacement for a desktop.
Maybe we can find a way to retain power over users and let them be productive, while capturing their value. it will be a win-win (we win, and win again).
well, it does matter a lot if like some people here, you're a software developper planning on developping on ios or android.
if ios is 10% "market share", it means android is 90%, so you better be learning the subtilities of android sdk and forget about improving your objective c skills. if it's 90% share, it means you can safely tell your customers to start building an ios version of their app first, then maybe later see if they want to invest on an android version.
and finally if it's 50/50, and stays like that for a couple of years, then you should probably invest in some cross-platform development environments.
Market share is often not the best metric to base those decisions on, especially considering iOS has historically generated more revenue for developers than Android, despite market share.
It's also pretty common for companies to sink money into developing native apps for either platform only to find that they get few users and ultimately generate little to no revenue. It totally varies depending on the nature of the product or service, but I've rarely encountered situations where market share was a primary indicator of what platforms a product or service needed to support.
Plus, not everyone of us is out to make millions or build the next Facebook/Apple/Google/Microsoft/Adobe etc. If I can develop an awesome app (or apps) for iOS (and enjoy doing so) why can't I just make a good living doing that? Or even build a small company over it? It sure is heck easier to test on iOS devices than throw it out to the android world, hoping it will be good on whatever device the user chose. It is what it is. I'll take less market share over trying to appease the entire world if it's easier (or even feasible) for me to do so.
Anecdote:
I guess that is why I was so excited to see Sour Cream and Onion Doritos back on the market (only for a short time, dammit). These were my favorite Doritos flavor when I was a child. I bought several bags and now they are gone again. This is what going only for highest profit margins and market share does. This is why we lose our fun sci-fi shows to freakin' wrestling. And, why I can't find David's(TM) nacho cheese flavored sunflower seeds at the store. Grrr...
I think it's more about people wanting to know they're on the winning side.
They purchase an Xbox and then spend the rest of their time convincing PS3 users they made a mistake. Android vs iPhone. Coke vs Pepsi. Mercedes vs BMW. etc etc etc etc.
Wow, this article is really a piece of junk. You can't say "Apple sells more iPads in 3 days than...", in the present tense, and then use data for an exceptional launch event. At the end of October 2013, you can't base a trend on data that compares 2012 with 2011. And so on.
Let's not forget that Google doesn't release sales numbers for it's Nexus 7 and Nexus 10 tablets. While I'm sure they are nowhere near the Apple's numbers, I don't think they're trivial and almost certainly rival Samsung's numbers.
There was an interesting pie chart shown at the Apple special event, which said that 75-80% of tablet usage is on iPad. I.e. iPads are actually used a lot more, even if they're losing in numbers. I'm wondering if there's a source for that graph somewhere.
I don't know what source they used for that or if the number is realistic, but even as an anti-Apple Android fanboy I find it pretty easy to believe there is a general truth to the idea that the sold to still-used ratio on Androids is likely much more divergent than it is on iOS.
Historically Android tablets have had support dropped much more quickly than iPads. I'm sure there are lots more Gingerbread, Honeycomb and Ice Cream Sandwich based tablets just sitting in a drawer somewhere replaced by shinier newer tablets running Jelly Bean than there are iPads which have a much higher "hand-me-down" or resell value even if the original owners move on to something newer.
Anecdotal:
I know a few people just now considering upgrading from their iPad gen 1, and not a single person who is still using a first gen Android tablet.
I think it's possible that the low-end Android tablets (e.g., the $99 generic ones, not the Nexus or high-end Samsungs) a) make up a huge majority of the number of units sold and b) are used in a very different way than the iPad is. For instance, I have plenty of friends who are Apple all the way except for cheap Android tablets that their kids use for Angry Birds or watching video -- and nothing else.
Interesting point about resale value. iPads resell for insane prices on eBay. A lot of what might get chalked up as unit sales of cheap tablets in the Apple ecosystem involve second-hand sales of older models.
Doing a quick look at Google Analytics for a few sites I manage and segmenting the traffic with Google's built in segment for Tablet traffic, I show that about 79% of the tablet traffic comes from iPads.
I was looking at mobile traffic patterns a few years ago for Oceania, and over 90% of the traffic was ios.
The other important factor for HNers is rate and volume of app purchases, the last figures I saw there were also completely dominated by ios - that is to say, Apple users buy tons of apps compared to Android.
Didn't the gap also come out of the fact Apple sells direct, and when they say they sold an ipad, they sold an ipad, and when Google, maybe even Samsung, say they sold a device, it is to the end retailer (carriers, bestbuy, and the like)? So they may be moving tons of devices, some significant(?) portion of which are sitting on shelves.
I think usage numbers for one single device need to be paired with ownership/usage of other devices by the same people in order to be more meaningful. A lot of people keep talking about how the PC is dead. But I spend roughly 10hrs a day in front of a laptop (which is still considered a PC, AFAIK). So if I am doing anything online, it is more often than not from my laptop rather than my phone or tablet. There are still many things that I'd prefer to do from my laptop so I am also just as likely to get up and go to the laptop than pull out my phone or reach for the tablet. When the laptop is not available, the tablet will do. It would be interesting to see how many iPad (and other tablet) users don't even have another system to use, thus do everything on it. If I didn't have another system, I would use my tablet more. But I don't need to.
That's similar to the stat that showed people with iPhones used their browsers more than people with Android phones. Apple may be pulling it out of their ass, but its not like there's not a precedent for it.
It was 81% on iPad, 19% on everything else. Not sure which metrics they're considering, though. I assume it is "time spent on devices", but that metric is not very objective, nor easy to measure.
I found that to be one of the more interesting metrics shown - but have to agree with everyone else as to how that is calculated. That said, anecdotally, it seems to jive up with experience, but who knows.
Like mobile operating system usage stats, whilst Apple with their iOS don't hold the largest market share, what they do hold is far, far more profitable to them.
If you look at market share you would think they are, but the market is expanding greatly and will continue to do so. If you look at the number of units sold, they still go up year over year. The same is true for iPhones.
There's a lot of focus on market share. Apple will never have the highest market share so it will never "win the tablet war" simply because of it's premium pricing. All the other competitors are essentially based on high-volume, low-margin strategies. Apple's strategy is based on low-volume, high-margin.
Does the definition of tablet include the (non-Fire) Kindle? That could explain the discrepancy between Apple's apparent tablet market share and that I've almost never seen a non-iPad tablet in public other than kindles. The kindle reader is sort of in a different market than the iPad though.
Sure, the "war" helps drive innovation. But, sometimes it's just innovation for innovation sake and not really providing value. Such as HDMI output on smartphones. I'm guessing less than 0.01% of people care about that one.
Anyway, I like my iPad/iPhone/OS X experience. I'm happy and that is all that matters to me in the end when I buy something. I had played with some Samsung products using Android (since I was going to port some of my iOS applications over) and I was completely disappointed. I passed that development onto someone else. :-)
Anyway, to each his/her own! I'm pretty sure more people buy Honda cars than BMW or Tesla and that doesn't mean BMW or Tesla are losing the car wars.