marfig said:
This distinction is what I believe is often the source of the PC vs. Tablet debate. Technically both are the same. But their demographics are different and they serve distinct markets that share nonetheless some common grounds. Just like the example you gave of the Toyota vs. Ferrari.
Some even take it further than this. In talking to a friend earlier, he mentioned that he doesn't even consider a notebook to be a PC, but rather just desktops. I can see where he's coming from. For decades, PCs meant "desktop" to
everyone, even though the term is in fact rather open-ended and simple.
marfig said:
So what to make of Canalys approach? I'm entirely not sure how happy Apple is about that.
I don't think Apple cares, to be honest, though I am sure the company wouldn't turn down any report that places it on a pedestal. Steve Jobs never called the iPad a tablet, but rather a device for the "post-PC" era. He didn't consider it to be a PC, likely because he didn't want it to be associated with one.
marfig said:
Apple has good reason to not want to lump tablets with PCs. The moment that is done, Apple tablet products completely lose their market dominance and becomes a single digit figure in the vast market of personal computers. And there could be stock price consequences. So Canalys projection can be anything but flattering.
What I wonder is how this sort of classification benefits
anyone. As a researcher, it does you little good to have tablets treated as PCs, because they are different from desktops, as mentioned in the article. From an end-user perspective the same could be said. It almost skews things, because the common perception is that tablets are
not PCs, so I'd imagine that if someone saw a report that Apple became the #1 market leader in PC shipments, people would think that it was referring to the Mac and MacBook line.
MacMan said:
As far as the subject goes, well tablets, like those of a traditional PC, have a cpu, memory, screens, and do, as you said, many of the things that traditional PCs do. Just because desktop PCs are bigger, faster or more powerful doesn't mean that laptops aren't PCs too, so why should people say that tablets are any different?
Well, to be fair, point-of-sale machines at a supermarket also have a CPU, memory, screens and so forth - but those aren't considered to be PCs. I think the general consensus here is that end-user devices that allow people to do the vast majority of what they need to do would be considered a PC. Tablets might not be great at encoding video, but neither would a netbook.
MacMan said:
Kougar said:
Seriously though, there's no way a tablet is a PC, simply based on one fact. The definition of a PC includes the word "capabilities", and there are plenty of things a tablet (and especially smartphones) cannot do.
I have to disagree here. The "capabilities" of a tablet might not be sufficient for
you, but they might be perfect for someone else. There are a lot of people out there who at most, edit photos, and that can be done on a tablet. Even music and video editing can be done on a tablet, along with writing documents, messing with spreadsheets and so forth. No, these capabilities are not as inviting, robust or easy as they are on a desktop PC, but I don't think that matters.
Kougar said:
I can't use one to play most games like TF2 or Civ V.
Neither can Linux... does that mean there is no such thing as a Linux PC? Tablets can run games just fine as well, so I am not sure I totally understand your point.
Kougar said:
I can't use most pads to open
Article said:
First, Canalys doesn't refer to tablets as "tablets", but rather "pads" - a term that virtually no one uses.
Kougar said:
Smartphones and tablets offer only a very limited slice of a PC's capabilities, and for that reason I don't consider them a PC, nor do they meet the definition of a PC. It'd ridiculous what many research firms claim these days.
I tend to agree, and even with this article, I won't refer to tablets and smartphones as PCs. I just admit the fact that in some cases, they
can be. I am confident in the fact that an overwhelming majority of people don't consider anything but a notebook or desktop to be a PC, so it's pointless to refer to them as such. Desktops and notebooks have been treated separately in industry reports forever, so to treat a tablet the same as a desktop and notebook is nonsensical. We should have split groups like: smartphone, tablet, ultra-portable (netbook included), notebook and desktop.