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The ultimate Tablet switch

Consumers with multiple electronic products in their house are ditching their other gadgets in favour of shiny new tablets. Seventy-seven percent of tablet owners reported using their new touch-sensitive devices for actions that they previously completed on their laptop or desktop computer.

Updated on: May 17, 2011 12:17 AM IST
AFP | By
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Consumers with multiple electronic products in their house are ditching their other gadgets in favour of shiny new tablets. Seventy-seven percent of tablet owners reported using their new touch-sensitive devices for actions that they previously completed on their laptop or desktop computer.

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More than one in three tablet owners admitted to using their desktop computer less often, or not at all, after purchasing a tablet. This was revealed by market researcher Nielsen in a study on tablet use in the US. Thirty percent of consumers who owned a laptop and a tablet indicated that they were more likely to favour their tablet over their laptop. An additional two percent of respondents said they had stopped using their laptop all together since purchasing the tablet device.

Tablets

Tablet ownership has had an impact on e-reader use too, said Nielsen. Twenty-seven percent of e-reader owners who also had a tablet used their e-reader less often or not at all. While many users said their tablet is replacing other gadgets, tablet use appears to go hand in hand with smartphones — no respondents said they had stopped using their high-tech mobile phone after owning a tablet, and and only 13 percent said they use their smartphone less frequently than before.

The most common reason given for picking up a tablet instead of a laptop or PC was the device’s portability. Ease of interface, fast start-up time, and convenience followed in importance.

One out of two tablet owners said they kept the device all to themselves while an additional 43 percent said they shared it with other people in their family. Eight percent said they owned a tablet that was used by other family members but didn’t use the device themselves.

“With new entrants like the Samsung Galaxy and the Motorola Xoom, the market for tablet computers is heating up in the United States, even though iPad continues to dominate the conversation and market,” said Nielsen.

 
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