Tomohiro Ohsumi / Bloomberg / Getty Images
Google's Japanese website is displayed on the company's Nexus 7 tablet computer at a news conference in Tokyo, Japan, Sept. 25, 2012.
If Google announces a Nexus phone and several tablets next week as expected, itâll be both a major turning point and a test for the companyâs Android platform.
The launch of new Nexus hardware will represent Googleâs biggest effort yet to regain control over Android and to find some footing in tablets, where the operating system has faltered. As if that wasnât enough of a challenge, Google also has to compete with a major phone and tablet push by Microsoft, new Kindle Fire tablets, new Nook tablets and a smaller, less expensive iPad.
It wonât be easy, but at this point, Google canât sit on the sidelines anymore.
In the smartphone realm, Android has flourished, but in a manner beyond Googleâs control. Wireless carriers and phone makers tend to run amok with the core Android software, creating devices that arenât necessarily worse, but are difficult to upgrade and loaded with bloatware. The results are an Android ecosystem that doesnât always seem unified, and experiences that vary wildly from one Android phone to the next.
(MORE: New Google Nexus Hardware: Here Comes the Wave?)
Tablets are even more troublesome. Android hasnât kept up with the iPad in market share unless you count Amazonâs Kindle Fire and Barnes & Nobleâs Nook tablets, which have their own app stores and unique interfaces. They barely qualify as Android devices, yet theyâve been more successful than any true Android tablet yet.
Mainstream Moment for Nexus
For Google, the term âNexusâ equates to a pure Android experience, consistent across all devices. But in the past, it was a geek thing, aimed at discerning enthusiasts and app developers. Even if sales werenât goodâ"and really, they never have beenâ"Google could brush it off because the devices werenât aimed at mainstream consumers anyway.
Over the last year or so, Googleâs goals for Nexus have transformed. The Android Marketâs re-branding as Google Play, the sales of $350 unlocked Galaxy Nexus phones and this summerâs launch of the $200-and-up Nexus 7 tablet all show that Google wants to use the Nexus brand to take back the Android spotlight. Even the slogan for the event, âThe playground is open,â suggests a more consumer-minded vibe than ever before.
The rumors for next weekâs event include a high-end Nexus phone from LG, a 10-inch Nexus tablet from Samsung (with a display thatâs even sharper than that of Appleâs iPad), new Nexus 7 tablets with 32 GB of storage and/or mobile broadband connectivity and possibly a $99 mystery tablet. Even if only a few of those devices materialize, theyâll represent Googleâs biggest push for the Nexus brand yet.
Lingering Questions
More Nexus devices donât necessarily mean more sales and more control over Android for Google.
Itâs not clear how a larger Nexus tablet would succeed where other Android tablets have failed, unless you believe mainstream consumers pay close attention to pixel density or other minute tech specs. Google Play has a smaller movie and music selection than Amazon Instant Video (as Laptop Mag noted in a recent comparison) and doesnât have as many proper tablet apps as Appleâs iPad. In lieu of sheer quantity, Google will need to show some amazing content of its own or knock it out the park on pricing with its tablets.
As for smartphones, the big question is whether Google will cater to wireless carriers, whose subsidies are what allow phones to sell for under $200 in the United States. (Theyâre also the reason you agree to a two-year contract when you buy a new phone.) Verizon and Sprint did subsidize the Galaxy Nexus, but the arrangement wasnât ideal as customers still had to wait months for software upgrades. If Google goes it alone and sells unlocked phones without subsidies, itâll still need a retail partner to provide hands-on time, along with some serious marketing to explain why an unlocked Nexus phone is worth getting.
All of which is to say that next weekâs press event will be a lot of fun to watch. And even if youâre not obsessed with the tech industryâs twists and turns, at least thereâll be some cool hardware.
MORE: Needed for Googleâs Next Nexus 7 Tablet: More Storage
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