• TV
  • MOVIES
  • MUSIC
  • SHOWBIZ
  • SOAPS
  • GAMING
  • TECH
  • FORUMS
  • Follow
    • Follow
    • facebook
    • twitter
    • google+
    • instagram
    • youtube
Hearst Corporation
  • TV
  • MOVIES
  • MUSIC
  • SHOWBIZ
  • SOAPS
  • GAMING
  • TECH
  • FORUMS
Forums
  • Register
  • Login
  • Forums
  • Gadgets
  • Tablets and e-Readers
'Nexus 7 3G in 6 weeks'
<<
<
2 of 2
>>
>
Rowieboy
04-09-2012
Originally Posted by Gormond:
“I doubt this is true as it would be really poor on Google's part to do this. If they were going to release a 3G version they should have mentioned it when the Nexus 7 was announced.

I can however see them making next years version with a 3G option”

Yes I could have lived with next year but a few weeks? Piss poor
psionic
04-09-2012
Originally Posted by Stuart_h:
“Not sure i understand the desire for 3G tablets. Im assuming you then have to pay a separate monthly subscription.

i just tether to my phone ???

can anyone explain why its necessary to go 3G on a tablet (excluding the obvious - "if you have forgottent your phone")

genuine query ....

the only place i thought this might be useful was the 3G kindle where 3G was actually free - even abroad. that seemed quite a bargain.”

Personally I prefer to tether to my smartphone. One less data package to worry about. Even when I got my original iPad 1 I opted for more memory instead of 3G as I didn't see the point of having another SIM.
flagpole
04-09-2012
It'll be like 3 months.

If they're only allowed to innovate once a year they may as well go home
Gormond
04-09-2012
Originally Posted by flagpole:
“It'll be like 3 months.

If they're only allowed to innovate once a year they may as well go home”

Most electronic products run on yearly cycles, it's very common be it TVs, Laptops, Smartphones, Ebook readers...
pi r squared
04-09-2012
Originally Posted by Gormond:
“Most electronic products run on yearly cycles, it's very common be it TVs, Laptops, Smartphones, Ebook readers...”

But it's not uncommon for small, iterative improvements (not that I necessarily consider 3G an "improvement") or changes to occur in mobile technology over a period of a few weeks - for example, a 16GB version of a phone available at launch with a 32GB version to follow. The White iPhone being released weeks after the regular one. And so on. I guess the difference is that these are often (but not always) announced in tandem so people can at least decide whether to buy now or wait, but apart from our rabid friend on here who was somehow shafted by Google, is anyone really that disappointed they didn't wait for a more expensive, second-contract needing, so-far-only-a-rumour 3G model?
flagpole
04-09-2012
Originally Posted by Gormond:
“Most electronic products run on yearly cycles, it's very common be it TVs, Laptops, Smartphones, Ebook readers...”

On replacement products. They are not retiring the nexus 7 and releasing the nexus 8. Laptop, smartphone manufacturers, release new products all the time. Could you imagine a laptop manufacturer not updating a laptop for a year?
flagpole
04-09-2012
Originally Posted by pi r squared:
“But it's not uncommon for small, iterative improvements (not that I necessarily consider 3G an "improvement") or changes to occur in mobile technology over a period of a few weeks - for example, a 16GB version of a phone available at launch with a 32GB version to follow. The White iPhone being released weeks after the regular one. And so on. I guess the difference is that these are often (but not always) announced in tandem so people can at least decide whether to buy now or wait, but apart from our rabid friend on here who was somehow shafted by Google, is anyone really that disappointed they didn't wait for a more expensive, second-contract needing, so-far-only-a-rumour 3G model?”

I am not. I think it would be crazy for apple to release the iPad mini and Google to not respond for a year. It is actually better for me that it does well.

On another note, I am reading this thread on my nexus 7, the thread is about the nexus 7 yet still I see there is an advert for the nexus 7 at the top of the page. Google I am aware of the product.
Gormond
04-09-2012
Originally Posted by flagpole:
“On replacement products. They are not retiring the nexus 7 and releasing the nexus 8. Laptop, smartphone manufacturers, release new products all the time. Could you imagine a laptop manufacturer not updating a laptop for a year?”

You make a valid point, I suppose this could be seen as a incremental upgrade. It would however annoy some users though as they may have waited 3 months if they had known.
Orbitalzone
04-09-2012
Hehehe technology waits for no man or woman.

If I really spent much time contemplating all the tech I've bought that was obsolete within months I'd pobably cry but you can't have your cake and eat it..... we all want everything now unless we've just bought it and we then want it to not change for ages to make our buying decision appear an excellent show of judgement.

What manufacturer is going to prevent sales of it's brand new product if they mention there's something else coming along soon that might be better featured for not much more (or any more) money? None.

As for getting pissed off based purely on a rumour is nuts
paulbrock
04-09-2012
I just don't see it. Google throw lots of money at their first ever Nexus tablet, do a big launch, (for them) a pretty major advertising campaign, sell them quicker than they can manufacture them and then turn round and say "hmm, maybe we should have included this bit". Its not like its new tech which has come along recently.

I'm not even sure there's the customer demand for it - what people say they're missing is expandable storage.

And then there's the all important pricing; one of the big things about the Nexus 7 was/is how cheap it is. Now unless they replace the wifi versions entirely with the 3g+wifi version they have to add extra £ to differentiate it.

Simply doesn't add up to me.
njp
05-09-2012
Originally Posted by flagpole:
“ On another note, I am reading this thread on my nexus 7, the thread is about the nexus 7 yet still I see there is an advert for the nexus 7 at the top of the page. Google I am aware of the product.”

Not as silly as the in-app adverts I keep seeing imploring me to install the chrome browser from google, which is pre-installed...
njp
05-09-2012
Originally Posted by paulbrock:
“And then there's the all important pricing; one of the big things about the Nexus 7 was/is how cheap it is. Now unless they replace the wifi versions entirely with the 3g+wifi version they have to add extra £ to differentiate it.

Simply doesn't add up to me.”

Why doesn't it add up? Manufacturers charge a lot more for extra functionality than the extra hardware to facilitate it costs. Google have already done it with the 16GB version (presumably so that they can actually make a profit), and they'll do it again with the 3G version. And people will make their choice.

I was dragged kicking and screaming into an Apple store recently in an advisory capacity to accompany somebody who insisted they needed an ipad. By the time all the upselling had finished, the notionally £400 ipad ended up costing nearly £600. And without 3G, the ipad can only be tethered to an iphone, whereas I don't think there are any restrictions on the Nexus (I assume you could use it with an iphone, but I'm sure somebody will tell me if that's wrong).

I very much doubt that 3G on the Nexus will add an extra £100 to the cost, like it does with the ipad.
paulbrock
05-09-2012
Originally Posted by njp:
“Why doesn't it add up? Manufacturers charge a lot more for extra functionality than the extra hardware to facilitate it costs. Google have already done it with the 16GB version (presumably so that they can actually make a profit), and they'll do it again with the 3G version. And people will make their choice.”

Because that would defeat the objective of a more affordable tablet. An extra £30 for 16gb, another £30-£50 for 3g..... Google isn't doing this to make profit per item (apparently it makes little to nothing per unit), it needs to claw market share away from Apple. And going from £169 for an 8gb version to £230-250 for a 16gb 3g version seems at odds with that.

Alternately they keep the price for 3g the same (or thereabouts) as the 16gb,effectively replacing it, in which case why bother with the wifi versions at all, for the sake of a couple of months of early adopter sales?

The only caveat I can think is they're concerned about ipad mini and/or Kindle Fire 2.
Gormond
05-09-2012
Originally Posted by paulbrock:
“Because that would defeat the objective of a more affordable tablet. An extra £30 for 16gb, another £30-£50 for 3g..... Google isn't doing this to make profit per item (apparently it makes little to nothing per unit), it needs to claw market share away from Apple. And going from £169 for an 8gb version to £230-250 for a 16gb 3g version seems at odds with that.

Alternately they keep the price for 3g the same (or thereabouts) as the 16gb, in which case why bother with the wifi versions at all, for the sake of a couple of months of early adopter sales?”

The thing is it wouldn't have added that much cost, chips that do WiFi/Bluetooth/3G are rather cheap.

I do believe that good make dry little on the 8GB model but not the 16GB, 8GB of flash doesn't cost £40, the 16GB coud have had 3G and a profit could still have been made.
paulbrock
05-09-2012
Originally Posted by Gormond:
“ the 16GB coud have had 3G and a profit could still have been made.”

right, so why not build it in the 1st models? struggling to see why Google would either plan to release an unannounced 3g model so soon after the wifi ones, or what reason they would have to rush out a 3g model after presumably discounting it at another point in the product lifecycle. Hence I'm of the opinion it should carry no more weight than the latest twitter death rumour.
Gormond
05-09-2012
Originally Posted by paulbrock:
“right, so why not build it in the 1st models? struggling to see why Google would either plan to release an unannounced 3g model so soon after the wifi ones, or what reason they would have to rush out a 3g model after presumably discounting it at another point in the product lifecycle. Hence I'm of the opinion it should carry no more weight than the latest twitter death rumour.”

Agree, I think if Google wanted it to have 3G it would have. My guess is they left it out so they could add it next year which is standard.
njp
05-09-2012
Originally Posted by paulbrock:
“Because that would defeat the objective of a more affordable tablet.”

It's already a more affordable tablet. And a slightly more expensive version with 3G - available as an option - will increase sales, not reduce them.

Quote:
“An extra £30 for 16gb, another £30-£50 for 3g..... Google isn't doing this to make profit per item (apparently it makes little to nothing per unit), it needs to claw market share away from Apple.”

3G for much less than Apple charge will help that. And there is no way that Google isn't making money on the 16GB version, unless they are losing a substantial amount on the 8GB version. I very much doubt that is the case. I suspect they are making a very small profit on the 8GB version, and a reasonable profit on the 16GB version.
LostFool
09-11-2012
<bump>

Despite the comments on this thread, the Nexus 7 3G is out on Nov 13.

For those complaining that it's too quick after the previous release then that's just the way the tablet market is moving so quickly. There will be new models coming out all of the time as demand increases and the prices of components fall. It wouldn't
surprise me to see another model in the next few months with improved specs.
Gormond
09-11-2012
Originally Posted by LostFool:
“<bump>

Despite the comments on this thread, the Nexus 7 3G is out on Nov 13.

For those complaining that it's too quick after the previous release then that's just the way the tablet market is moving so quickly. There will be new models coming out all of the time as demand increases and the prices of components fall. It wouldn't
surprise me to see another model in the next few months with improved specs.”

Could be worse, I could have bought an iPad 3
<<
<
2 of 2
>>
>
VIEW DESKTOP SITE TOP

JOIN US HERE

  • Facebook
  • Twitter

Hearst Corporation

Hearst Corporation

DIGITAL SPY, PART OF THE HEARST UK ENTERTAINMENT NETWORK

© 2015 Hearst Magazines UK is the trading name of the National Magazine Company Ltd, 72 Broadwick Street, London, W1F 9EP. Registered in England 112955. All rights reserved.

  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
  • Complaints
  • Site Map