corpses of failed tablets
By Brad Reed From BGR
Whom the gods wish to destroy, first they have enter the tablet market. After Microsoft announced yesterday that it was writing off $900 million due to excess Surface RT inventory, it became just the latest company to have failed to create a tablet capable of competing with Apple’s iPad and cheaper Android tablets such as the Amazon Kindle Fire. Indeed, when you look back over the past few years, it’s surprising to see how many companies released tablets that sold so incredibly poorly that many of them haven’t ever bothered to try their hands at making tablets again. For those who enjoy reliving car crashes, then, here is a recap of some of the biggest tablet flops that we’ve seen in just the past three years.
Tablet Flop No. 1: The Motorola Xoom. When Motorola released the Xoom in 2011, it was still enjoying some solid success with its Droid lin
Tablet Flop No. 2: The HP TouchPad. webOS fans expecting great things from the platform once it was purchased by HP were in for a major disappointment after HP announced that it was killing off the platform less than three months after it released the webOS-based HP TouchPad to the market. The TouchPad’s one positive legacy was that it showed other vendors that there was indeed a strong market for non-iPad tablets as long as you were willing to make the price low enough. Once HP slashed the TouchPad’s price to a fire sale-level $99, consumers scooped it up in droves. Amazon’s Kindle Fire, which launched for $200 a little later in the year, proved to have much more enduring popularity.
Given all this, it’s easier to have sympathy for Microsoft’s failures with the Surface RT. Apple really threw the tech world for a loop when its iPad became a smash hit in 2010 and very few companies have really figured out how to do tablets right, even three years later.
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