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Focused app bundling could revolutionise tablets

We often discuss books or TV shows. Do we spend a lot of time discussing the material the the paper is made of or the kind of silicon used in the TV screen? N Madhavan writes.

Updated on: Aug 28, 2011 11:08 PM IST
Hindustan Times | By
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We often discuss books or TV shows. Do we spend a lot of time discussing the material the the paper is made of or the kind of silicon used in the TV screen? Yet, I find it baffling that there is so much time being devoted to discussing smartphones and tablet PCs without much speaking on what we are actually doing with it.

HT Image
HT Image

I recently came across an iPhone application for those who want to learn tabla. On my own Nokia handset, I started - two years after I bought it - using an "app" that helps me know the weather in various world cities. Applications or apps abound in the emerging universe of digital lifestyles. We need to focus a bit more on them.

A year or so ago, I had coined the term "app-phone" to emphasise gadgets that are sold not on the basis of what the handset or tablet is, but the kind of apps that make sense to the buyer.

Think of the fact that Nokia last week launched phones as cheap as $30 - that's just about Rs 1,200. The smartphones cost only twice as much now. Reliance Communications has launched tablets for under Rs 10,000. The way things are, apps and content will matter more. You can buy a gadget if it has just the right apps. Music lovers for instance will gladly buy a 20 GB tablet than a 200 GB memory one - if the seller offers worthy apps or collections (let us say, all the music of the 1960s movies, or an app that helps you learn the guitar).

 
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N Madhavan

While India saw heated protests and a debate last week over Net Neutrality -- the call to the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) for strictly separating content (apps) and carriage (data plans), the European Union’s Competition Commissioner took a step forward in another side of the business by charging Google with defying what is called “search neutrality”.

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