Samsung Challenges Apple with iPad Rival

Sept. 2, 2010
The Galaxy Tab, which is half the weight of the iPad, runs on Google's Android 2.2 operating system.

Samsung unveiled on Sept. 2 what the South Korean electronics giant hopes will be a major rival to Apple's highly successful iPad tablet PC. The Galaxy Tab, presented at the IFA electronics trade fair in Berlin, Germany, has a seven-inch touchscreen, slightly smaller than the iPad's 9.7 inches, and uses Google's Android 2.2 operating system.

"Samsung recognizes the tremendous growth potential in this newly created market and we believe that the Samsung Galaxy Tab brings a unique and open proposition to market," said mobile communications unit head JK Shin.

The Galaxy Tab, weighing 0.8 pounds -- almost half the iPad's 1.5 pounds -- launches in Europe in mid-September, and in other markets including South Korea, the U.S. and elsewhere in Asia in the coming months.

But Samsung gave no indication however of whether the Galaxy Tab will undercut the iPad on price, which retails from $499 in the United States -- or 499 euros in Europe -- for the basic model.

Reports in the trade press said that the Galaxy Tab will be more expensive, at 799 euros (1,025 dollars) in Germany and 699 euros in France.

Apple sold more than three million iPads in the 80 days after going on sale in the United States in April, with demand so strong that some U.S. customers had to wait several weeks to get their hands on one. Since then, the device, which used Apple's own MAC iOS operating system, has gone on sale in more than a dozen other countries and is poised to hit the shelves in China, the world's largest Internet market, later this month.

The success caught California-based Apple's competitors on the hop, and they have been rushing to respond with their own tablet PCs.

It is rumored however that Toshiba will also unveil its own tablet PC in Berlin on Sept. 2. Samsung's South Korean rival, LG Electronics, has promised to release a tablet PC using Android before December.

Copyright Agence France-Presse, 2010

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