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So the iPad is Here…Now What?

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iPad

In January 2010, Apple Inc. finally launched its long-awaited touchscreen tablet — the iPad. It can surf the Web, play music and videos, send mail, display photos, read e-books and publications, and run thousands of applications from the App Store. Indeed, Apple CEO Steve Jobs says it will put “the whole Internet in the palm of your hands.”

Already, the iPad has gotten attention from consumers and industry players alike. While some analysts expect it to “ignite” sales of tablet computers, some have also pointed out its deficiencies, such as the device’s failure to run Adobe’s Flash player, its inability to support multitasking capabilities, its lack of a built-in camera, and so on.

To simply focus on the pros and cons of Apple’s latest offering, however, may be to miss the crucial point, says Sandra Sieber, Associate Professor and Head of the Department of Information Systems at top-ranked IESE Business School, an operating partner of the Institute for Media and Entertainment (IME). Sieber also teaches the Advanced Digital Media Strategies executive education program at IME.

And what exactly is the point? A likely price war on Internet data plans, leading to increased Web use and consumption of content, says Sieber. This is because unlike the iPhone, the iPad has no exclusivity contract with AT&T.  Consumers are free to choose which telecom operator to work with, opening the field wide for competition. So while the iPad could likely boost bandwidth use much like the iPhone did, telecom operators may not find it as lucrative, as they would likely have to cut profit margins and offer economical data plans to win their share of the market.

The likelihood that iPad owners will consume more content, however, is good news for content distributors and developers. “It will still imply that content distributors will have to find good ways to monetize content, but with this new proposition, Apple directly attacks the access hurdle,” says Sieber. “As (Apple Inc.) said on the iPad presentation event, they have 75 million iPhone users. What they did not say is that they are all paying hefty data plans. How many users may they have if the mobile Internet becomes cheap?”

To read Sieber’s detailed analysis on the subject, published on the IESE Technology Blog, click here.

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