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Dell Stops Selling Android Tablets (pcworld.com) 82

Dell is discontinuing its Venue line of Android tablets. Furthermore, the company says it will also stop issuing software updates to its existing Android tablets. The move comes as Dell wants to shift its focus on Windows 2-in-1 devices. As for the other reason, the American company adds that Android market is "oversaturated" and is experiencing "declining demand from consumers." Other Android devices from the company were discontinued some time ago. The company will honor after sales support for people who have purchased Venue Android tablets until the warranty and service contracts expire.
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Dell Stops Selling Android Tablets

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  • I was wondering who still uses an iPad / Android tablet now that the fad has mostly passed and sales have declined.

    Mine sits in the drawer in the nightstand most of the time. I only pull it out when I'm doing something on my phone and wish I had a bigger screen.

    My first tablet was iPad 2, then Nexus 10, and now a Galaxy Tab S 10.5. I know what I'm taking about, as I've used both iOS and Android. No fanboyism here. I'm definitely now buying a new tablet once the Tab dies.

    Between my Nexus 5 and my no-brand 15
    • Re: (Score:2, Troll)

      If I wanted a tablet, I think I'd actually rather get an ipad. Even though I'm not an Apple fan, at least you can count on support and updates for a number of years, and that after the actual model I bought is discontinued, it will still have an update path.

      • That was basically my experience between the two. The Galaxy Tab I had got its last update like six months after I got it. The iPad 3 i got at least three years worth from. Actually it might have one or two more, but Apple did teach me to cool it on the late-in-life updates or risk it being irreversibly sluggish.

        • by thsths ( 31372 )

          I agree. Tablets are really useful, and there is clearly demand, but very little on offer in the quality tablet space.

          There is Apple, there is the Samsung Galaxy Tab S, and there was the Sony Xperia Z Tablet series (now discontinued). The Kindle Fire HDX also has aspirations. Dell never played in the same league.

          2-in-1 devices are certainly more flexible, but I find Windows really off-putting. It may be more powerful, but the App market is very sorry looking, and real Windows programs just do not scale prop

    • by msmash ( 4491995 ) Works for Slashdot on Thursday June 30, 2016 @03:17PM (#52421737)
      I have an iPad, and a Nexus 6. As much as I would like to read things on my 6-inch phone, nothing beats reading a magazine on an iPad (and other tablets), in my opinion. So I see some value in tablet, but yeah, it's not really serving as many purposes.
    • Re:Interesting post (Score:5, Informative)

      by Desler ( 1608317 ) on Thursday June 30, 2016 @03:29PM (#52421813)

      Tons of people. Over 200 million units were sold in 2015. And just Apple alone they've sold 26 million in the first two quarters of 2016. Your anecdotes don't match reality by any measure.

      • It was the anecdote of a person who prefers his 15" gaming notebook and writes off an iPad as a fad. To put this in perspective 200 million iPads were sold in 2015. Yet only 72million PCs, a figure which includes desktops, laptops, netbooks, and slate devices. I'll leave it as an exercise to the reader to determine how few of those were for "gaming notebooks".

    • I still love Android tablets, I just haven't had a need for a new one in 3 years. My 2013 Nexus tablet still serves me just fine and I use it almost every day for looking up data during meetings at work and couch surfing and playing games at home or watching movies when traveling. When it finally dies I will definitely buy another, if not sooner. The nVidia Shield tablets have been calling my name lately.

      • by Gr8Apes ( 679165 )
        I still love iPads, I just haven't had a need for a new one in 5 years. My 2011 iPad2 still serves me just fine and I use it almost every day for looking up data during meetings at work and couch surfing and playing games at home or watching movies when traveling. When it finally dies I will definitely buy another, if not sooner. The iPad Pros have been calling my name lately.
        • I like my 8" Galaxy Tab A. They are only $170 now. An iPad would lock me into an ecosystem I tried and didn't like. And cost a whole lot more. If I wanted a tablet with a better display than any iPad I'd get a Galaxy Tab S.

    • by Gr8Apes ( 679165 )
      The tablet is a whole lot easier to browse the web on or do a whole host of other things. I'll use my phone, but if my tablet is available, I'll use that over the phone. If a laptop or other computer is available, I'll use those for web browsing. There's just no substitute for multiple tabs and flexible cut and paste and general actions taken on a computer browser versus the experience on a phone or tablet. The thing is, tablets appear to last at least twice as long as phones, at least from what I'm seeing
    • by SQLGuru ( 980662 )

      At this point, a large screened phone is sufficient for my tablet needs.....games, browsing, podcasts, etc. A Tablet was never really a good creation platform and the 2-in-1s are the next attempt to get people to move away from a laptop.....I probably won't even get one of those. I think a nice phone and a nice laptop are still going to be my preferred weapons of choice.

    • Between my Nexus 5 and my no-brand 15" gaming notebook, I'm well served as far as my home computing needs go.

      Same goes for my decidedly unscientific research goes. My brother gave his tablet to his daughter to play with. My co-workers either sold or ditched theirs. The only exception is my 65-year-old mom, who loves her iPad to death and won't use anything else.

      I started with a HP tablet. I got 5 of them during the fire sale and gave most of them as Christmas gifts.

      Shortly after I bought an Asus TF700T 10" tablet. I used it primarily as a laptop replacement when traveling. It had longer battery life and was a ton lighter. I used it for years. Asus came out with Android updates for the first 2 years, then I switched to third party android versions from the XDA board.

      I bought a Nexus 7 on sale. Fits in my cargo shorts pocket. Perfect for browsing the Internet

    • Who still uses a 15" gaming notebook now that the fad has mostly passed and sales have declined?

    • Mine sits in the drawer in the nightstand most of the time. I only pull it out when I'm doing something on my phone and wish I had a bigger screen.

      No wonder it doesn't get used - you've got it stored away. Mine sits on the end table at my end of couch, and see's daily use. I use it to check my mail and the news while I'm drinking my morning coffee. It's equally in use in the evening for the same purposes, as well as looking up information on shows I'm watching. It also goes into the kitchen to serve

    • I bought a 9.7" iPad Pro a couple of months ago and I've barely used my personal laptop since. I don't take my work laptop to meetings anymore now that I can scribble out notes easily while I'm recording talks.

      I can't play "big" games on it or edit code (at least not to the degree I need), but for almost everything else it's way more convenient than a full-size laptop.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by Anonymous Coward

      Tablets are for rooms that have two people in them. You wake up in the morning, and one of you gets to use the nice machine, with the keyboard and mouse, and big TV at the foot of the bed. The other person wants to browse something else while drinking their coffee. That's where the tablet comes in: as a second screen. The room otherwise just can't easily (or very sanely) contain two monitors.

    • I am surprised you found no uses for your tablet. I own one of the larger tablets with a 10 inch screen, and for me it's basically a portable TV screen that I can use for:

      1. Watching live and on-demand content of all ATT Uverse channels, and also Netflix, Amazon, youtube, etc from any room where there is no TV, from hotels, and from my gym as I am working out on a cardio, spinner bike, etc.

      2. Watching any shows I have downloaded directly onto the device (I have tons) or ripped from a DVD in the gym, on a fl

    • I regularly use my Fire tablet to read e-books. I find my phone screen too small for the purpose; the 7" tablet is just right for reading on the go. I only occasionally use it for other apps because it's slow, mostly because of having only 1GB RAM. I expect I will buy another or its current equivalent if it dies - that one use is important enough to me to justify the $50, or less if you catch it on sale as I did.
  • by SeaFox ( 739806 ) on Thursday June 30, 2016 @03:18PM (#52421743)

    No joke about "Venue being closed"?

  • Translation (Score:3, Insightful)

    by JustAnotherOldGuy ( 4145623 ) on Thursday June 30, 2016 @03:18PM (#52421745) Journal

    ...the American company adds that Android market is "oversaturated" and is experiencing "declining demand from consumers."

    Translation:

    "Too many people are already using an Android tablet and we can't sell as many as we used to."

    • by mark-t ( 151149 )

      So instead of selling something that they can't sell as many of as they used to because the market might be getting saturated, they are switching to selling something that where the market isn't that saturated because there isn't as high a demand for it in the first place?

      Yeah, that makes sense.

      • So instead of selling something that they can't sell as many of as they used to because the market might be getting saturated, they are switching to selling something that where the market isn't that saturated because there isn't as high a demand for it in the first place?

        Yeah, that makes sense.

        It actually does make sense from a long-term marketing perspective. Maybe they'll be able to drum up more business or stimulate that market with advertising or corporate targeting, maybe they'll be able to convince people to switch from Android to the Windows 2-in-1 devices, or maybe they're just trying to find a fresh market to drop anchor in.

        In any case it makes little sense for them to keep trying to sell in a declining or saturated market and so the alternative does make some sense, albeit in a somewhat

    • by Revek ( 133289 )

      So they can't compete with cheaper tablets and are backing out of that market?

      • So they can't compete with cheaper tablets and are backing out of that market?

        If they've saturated that market (or someone else has) then yes, it makes sense to set their sights on a potentially more lucrative market that isn't all played out yet.

        Maybe they thinking that instead of selling 1000 Android tablets for say, $300, maybe they'll sell 500 Windows tablets for $900. Dell has often gone after the corporate market, so that might be where they're going to focus their efforts. I don't know, I'm just speculating but from a marketing perspective it does make a certain amount of sens

    • by Curate ( 783077 )
      Not sure why that sentence needed any translation, or why your "translation" was modded insightful. The sentence was quite clear the way it was written.
    • Then there is something Samsung knows but Dell doesn't. Samsung introduces multiple tablet models every year.

      • Then there is something Samsung knows but Dell doesn't. Samsung introduces multiple tablet models every year.

        They may do that out of a desire to find a good fit for various perceived levels or niches in the market, or it may just be artificial differentiation. That is, float lots of "different" versions of something and see which one people gravitate towards even though they're basically the same thing.

        But either way, I'm all for having lots of choices in electronic gear, and by and large I've found Samsung to be fairly decent stuff. Some of their older tablets were built like tanks and stood up to a lot of abuse.

  • by Blaskowicz ( 634489 ) on Thursday June 30, 2016 @03:19PM (#52421749)

    I'm only saying that because I never knew Dell even sold Android tablets. Heard a bit of Venue as Windows x86 tablets.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      In 2015, Dell made the most beautiful tablet ever, the Venue 8 7840, with an absolutely *gorgeous* AMOLED screen, Intel processor, microSD card support, and a really awesome camera. I bought two of them about a week after they came out, based on all the awesome reviews. It was an 8.4" screen, but bezel-less, so only *slightly* larger than my ancient Nexus 7.

      It came with Lolipop. It got exactly *one* update about two months later, to Marshmallow. And then, that was it. No more. Not a single fucking update fo

  • Well, if Dell is going to just screw me and not issue software updates for the Android device that I bought with their name on it, expecting that an American company was less likely to leave me without updates than a much less expensive Chinese source, then I guess I'll just have to buy whatever Dell wants to sell me now, even if it is Microsoft crap that no one wants.
    • then I guess I'll just have to buy whatever Dell wants to sell me now, even if it is Microsoft crap that no one wants.

      We knew you'd come along eventually...

  • Furthermore, the company says it will also stop issuing software updates to its existing Android tablets. [...] The company will honor after sales support for people who have purchased Venue Android tablets until the warranty and service contracts expire.

    This seems inconsistent: If you stop issuing software updates, you are negligent in your after-sales support.

  • Funny, since from recent experience their current laptops have better hardware support under Linux than they do with Windows 10.

    • Try that with their servers. Their Linux driver support is extremely lagging.

      Even today if you download new drivers for an MD array, they bundle Java 6. Which was end of life over 3 years ago and is incapable of interoperating with modern TLS implementations. If you care about securing your systems and use Dell drivers, disable as much as you can and live by the CLI.

  • by DickBreath ( 207180 ) on Thursday June 30, 2016 @04:19PM (#52422249) Homepage
    Who knew?

    (and even if I had known, who cares?)
  • they should make available tools to allow people root access so they can install Linux or other android distributions
  • by ilsaloving ( 1534307 ) on Thursday June 30, 2016 @04:30PM (#52422365)

    I learned the hard way not to trust Dell with mobile device support, when I bought one of their Windows CE devices, specifically because they said that they were going to put out an update to the next major version. It never came.

    If you want to buy any kind of mobile device, and want it to be supported, you don't buy it from Dell. Ditto with Samsung.

    And now a whole bunch more people have now learned that lesson the hard way as well.

  • "The smallest 13-inch on the planet with the world’s first infinityEdge display

    Dell US [dell.com]:"This product is currently unavailable. Please find our recommendation for a comparable system below."

    Dell UK [dell.com]: "Starting at £858 Ex. VAT & Shipping"
  • Dell seems to have a good repo with Microsoft than Google. If reports to be believed the move was to bring the windows 2 in 1s in place android handheld devices. Hope this strategy works for dell. Not really a fan of Dell mobile devices.
  • I bought 2 Dell Venue 7 tablets a couple years ago - and they have been solid. My kid plays on his daily. no battery issues, and only 1 full wipe and reset.
  • As long as the other OS is Linux, I'll have a look at it.

    Oh, that's not what they mean?

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