When Toshiba announced
its 13-inch Excite tablet Tuesday, the company made an argument that
one size does not fit all when it comes to touchscreen devices. But who
will actually use such a large slab of mobile computing?
"The Excite 13 is what we
see as a home tablet," Jared Leavitt, a Toshiba spokesman, told Wired.
"The larger size makes it an ideal kitchen tablet. You can watch how-to
videos while you're cooking, or look up recipes. And then later, you can
bring it into the living room to watch videos with the kids, or to look
at family photos with friends."
Thankfully, Toshiba is
shipping the Excite 13, which runs on Google's Android 4.0 operating
system, with a stand that will relieve owners from having to hold, or
prop up, the large device themselves.
And despite being bigger
than pretty much every other competing tablet on the market, the Excite
13 is fairly thin and light for its size, Leavitt said, noting that it
will weigh 2.2 pounds and measure 0.4 inches thick.
Nonetheless, anyone who's
watching the tablet market has to wonder why Toshiba is releasing a
tablet behemoth in a world enamored with smaller devices. After all, the
first tablet to gain any widespread consumer adoption other than
Apple's iPad is the 7-inch Kindle Fire.
And looking forward, the hottest rumors focus on an iPad mini and a 7-inch tablet that would be Google's next flagship mobile device. In short: Small is in, and big isn't even part of the conversation.
Jared Spool, the CEO of
User Interface Engineering, a usability research firm, agrees that
Toshiba is thinking about tablet design in a way that its rivals aren't.
But Spool doesn't agree that the world needs, or wants, a 13-inch
tablet.
"This is the sort of
typical maneuver of just adding another feature without improving the
actual user experience," Spool told Wired. "It's just bigger, and it's
not clear to me that anyone is asking for bigger. You can only get the
iPad in one size and nobody is saying, 'Gee, it just feels a little too
small to me.'"
But while there seems to
be no consumer demand for larger tablets, the use case of watching
movies as a group, or flipping through photos with loved ones on the
couch, on a 13-inch slate isn't too hard to imagine, says Jakob Nielsen,
principal at the Nielsen Norman Group, a usability research firm.
"If a small group of
people is trying to use the tablet together, sitting on the couch and
consuming content, this size makes sense," Nielsen told Wired. "But I do
think [the Excite 13] might be a bit of overreach. I don't think that
people only need one computer. Nowadays, most people have two computers,
between a laptop and a smartphone. But where this Toshiba tablet fits
in -- between those devices and the TV -- I'm not sure. It's not likely
to be a big success."
Spool also predicts that the Excite 13 will be neither an iPad killer, nor a top-selling Android tablet.
"These types of
enhancements are knee-jerk reactions from companies who are trying to
'out feature' other companies," he said. "But what this comes down to is
that it's not the specific technology in a tablet that makes it
exciting. It's the user experience. And there's just a lot less to do on
an Android tablet than an iPad. And what there is to do is much
clumsier because the screen sizes and specs for Android tablets are all
over the place. A 13-inch screen and a bunch of top specs do nothing to
change that."
Among the other specs
the Excite 13 touts are a quad-core Nvidia Tegra 3 processor, 1GB of
RAM, a 5-megapixel rear facing camera, and four rear-mounted speakers to
blast audio from the tablet's aluminum back.
The tablet also sports a 1,600×900 screen resolution, a micro-USB port, a micro-HDMI port and a full-size SD card slot.
The Excite 13 sits at
the top of a revamped tablet line for Toshiba, in terms of both price
and screen size with a price tag of $649.99 for the 32GB model, and
$749.99 for the 64GB model, when it hits stores in early June.
For those looking for a
more traditionally sized tablet that still packs a quad-core punch,
Toshiba will also ship in June a 7.7-inch version of the Excite (known
as the Excite 7) at $499.99 for 16GB of storage and $579.99 for 32GB.
A 10-inch Excite, dubbed
the Excite 10, will ship in May for $449.99 with 16 GB of storage and
$529.99 for the 32GB. The Excite range of tablets replaces Toshiba's old
line of Thrive slates, which were offered in both a 7-inch and 10-inch
model.
In case you're wondering why is the Excite 7 more expensive than the Excite 10, Leavitt explained: "Smaller is harder to do."
Source: Wired
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