Imagine, if you will, a runner five miles into a marathon. At this stage they would have barely started, covering justĀ 20% of the overall distance. Now picture that person stopping mid-stride and punching themselves in the face over and over again until they cascade into unconsciousness.
That runner, friends, is Google.
To sprinkle some context on the tale of self-pugilation: Google has discontinued its flagship tablet, the Pixel Slate.Ā 9to5 Google noticed the tablet āĀ which was launched in 2018Ā ā was no longer listed on the companyās website.Ā The Pixel Slate is dead.
Google discontinuing a product or service isnāt much of a surprise, I mean, there are websites solely dedicated to keeping track of all the things the company has prematurely shuttered.
But the Pixel Slate is a big loss, both to Google and the public at large.
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Before we go on, a short disclaimer.
Weāve reached out to Google for a comment and more clarification, but weāre working under the assumption that the company has shifted completely out of selling tablets, rather than readying for a next model. Not only has itĀ half-announced this, the decision is also backed by logic: why would Google remove all traces of the hardware from its site if it was planning to launch something else?
In other words, Googleās tablet aspirations are dead.
But why are you a sadboy about the Pixel Slate?
Simply put, itās because Google had the potential to make a fantastic, competitive, and affordable machine.
Over the past year, I got bang into tablets again ā something I attribute to my time with iPad Pro. Long story short, I nowĀ get what tablets are for. I understand their value. And, alongside that, I recognize the importance of competition.
The iPad has long been theĀ dominant tablet across the world and thereās little thatās truly challenging it. Yes, the Samsung Galaxy Tab and Amazon Fire HDĀ are popular and solid devices, but they canāt really match Apple when it comes to quality, usability, and interoperability
But I believe Google could.
Letās take its Pixel phones as an example.Ā Iāve written before that the company found its sweet spot with the budget-focused āaā series of handsets. These thrive by eschewing the idea of competing as a premium brand ā instead making affordable devices that useĀ the cleanest version of Android andĀ perform seamlessly as part of the overall Google ecosystem. In fact, the company seems to have taken this onboard, as with the Pixel 5 it actually removed some features the previous model had, as well asĀ dropping the price.
And you know what? It was one of the best phones of 2020.
This is the approach I wouldāve loved Google to take with the Pixel Slate. The original tablet wasnāt perfect ā far from it, in fact. Although it was a gorgeous machine, it was overpriced compared to its competitors and it wasnāt entirely clear who it was aimed at.
But these are easy issues to solve in todayās world.
Considering the past year has seen tablet sales soar and Google shift millions of Chromebooks, now should be the ideal time for the company to release a new and cheaper Pixel Slate.
Imagine it: an affordable machine that can be used for work and leisure. Something that could be combined the Pixelbook Pen making for easy note taking. All your work and details seamlessly synced across your Google accounts. Mmm, Iām getting fuzzy just thinking about it.
Honestly, thereās probably a good reason why Google has discontinued the Pixel Slate. Maybe itās putting all its focus on the Pixelbook Go? Maybe sales were bad? But it was early days for the Pixel Slate, it had only just started racing against its competitors.
I struggle to see a world in which a more affordable Pixel Slate wouldnāt kill it ā and this leads me to one conclusion: by totally discontinuing the tablet, Google has punched itself in the face.
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Published February 1, 2021 ā 10:35 UTC
This article is auto-generated by Algorithm Source: thenextweb.com