 Early Google tablet mockups running Chrome OS (Source: Google)
Google looks to extend the success in the mobile sphere to tablets
Google
is on a roll when it comes to mobile hardware. Unlike Apple,
Google doesn't design its own hardware -- rather it sticks to what it
knows best, software. Android recently passed
the iPhone in U.S. market share according to market research
firm NPD.
Now Google is looking forward to a new
mobile assault on a piece of Apple's mobile empire that just recently
launched. According
to Verizon Wireless Chief Executive Lowell McAdam, Google is
teaming up with his company to launch a tablet which will compete
with the iPad.
Apple's iPad has moved over
a million units already and some analysts speculate that
the tablet market could displace the netbook market as the next great
computing craze.
McAdam comments, "We're looking at all
the things Google has in its archives that we could put on a tablet
to make it a great experience."
Verizon Wireless declined
to add further details, namely who Google's hardware partner might
be. HTC seems one likely candidate, based on the company's
intimate involvement with the Android project. However, a
mid-sized tablet would be new ground for HTC, which specializes in
more diminutive cell phones.
Dell, another Android
partner, is another possibility. HP is less likely, given the
word that it's working
on a webOS tablet, drawing on the expertise of new acquisition
Palm.
The OS of the Google tablet(s) also remain unknown.
Google is reportedly prepping its Chrome OS for tablets, and
has shown
off new designs. Android is perhaps equally likely, as it
has been
shown to be easily portable to tablet designs. Either
way, the recent required 3D
OS skin-maker BumpTop will likely add enough polish to the
OS to make it an attractive alternative to the iPad.
There's
no word on how soon Google's design might land.
"Paying an extra $500 for a computer in this environment -- same piece of hardware -- paying $500 more to get a logo on it? I think that's a more challenging proposition for the average person than it used to be." -- Steve Ballmer
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