Jul 12

Apple’s $60M trademark deal opens way for ...

Computerworld – The $60 million Apple paid to a little-known Chinese firm for the iPad trademark will let the Cupertino, Calif. company not only start selling its newest tablet in China, but also lays the groundwork for an expected smaller iPad this fall, a financial analyst said today.

Earlier Monday, a Chinese court said that the dispute between Apple and Proview, a Chinese PC and display vendor that faces bankruptcy, had been resolved when Apple paid Proview $60 million for the “iPad” trademark in the People’s Republic of China (PRC), or mainland China.

The companies had been locked in a legal battle since late 2011. Apple contended it had purchased the trademark rights in 2009, but Proview convinced several courts in the PRC otherwise, resulting in Apple’s iPad 2, the tablet introduced in the U.S. in March 2011 and in China later that year, being pulled from some store shelves.

Apple has not rolled out the new iPad, the improved model launched four months ago, in the PRC, although it has sold the tablet in Hong Kong and Taiwan, two other markets the company includes in its “Greater China” sales region.

With the Proview problem behind it, Apple can now start selling the new iPad in mainland China, said Brian White, an analyst with Topeka Capital Markets, in a Monday note to clients.

“Today’s iPad settlement is important and opens up the sale of the new iPad,” wrote White, who also noted that Apple had received clearance from the PRC’s Telecommunications Equipment Certification Center in late May.

“The new iPad was supposed to launch in the June quarter,” said White in a follow-up interview Monday, referring to the three-month period that ended Saturday, June 30.

Sales of the new iPad will now start in the third calendar quarter, the current period, said White.

He doesn’t expect that the delay will impact sales overall in the PRC. instead, iPads that would have been sold last quarter — if Apple had not run into Proview and the Chinese courts — will be this quarter.

Or in some cases, those iPads have already been sold.

Several weeks ago, Apple removed its two-iPads-per-customer restriction in Hong Kong, a move that White read as prompted by heavy demand from customers in the PRC. “Many Apple products make their way over to the mainland [from Hong Kong],” White said.

Even more important to sales in the PRC, said White, is that the end of the trademark ruckus means Apple will be able to unveil a smaller iPad on the mainland later this year.

“We believe the launch of an iPad Mini — we expect September — will prove very popular in China,” said White, who was one of the analysts to first latch onto the idea that Apple would finally produce a so-called “iPad Mini” with a smaller screen, most likely one sized between 7 and 8 inches. The current iPad sports a 10.7-in. display.

Apple’s $60M trademark deal opens way for iPad Mini in China, says analyst

Jul 03

Apple's $60M trademark deal opens way for ...

The $60 million Apple paid to a little-known firm for the iPad trademark will let the Cupertino, Calif. company not only start selling its newest tablet there, but also lays the groundwork for an expected smaller iPad this fall, a financial analyst said today.

Earlier Monday, a Chinese court said that the dispute between Apple and Proview, a Chinese PC and display vendor that faces bankruptcy, had been resolved when Apple paid Proview $60 million for the “iPad” trademark in the People’s Republic of China (PRC), or mainland China.

The companies had been locked in a legal battle since late 2011. Apple contended it had purchased the trademark rights in 2009, but Proview convinced several courts in the PRC otherwise, resulting in Apple’s iPad 2, the tablet introduced in the U.S. in March 2011 and in China later that year, being pulled from some store shelves.

Apple has not rolled out the new iPad, the improved model launched four months ago, in the PRC, although it has sold the tablet in Hong Kong and Taiwan, two other markets the company includes in its “Greater China” sales region.

With the Proview problem behind it, Apple can now start selling the new iPad in mainland China, said Brian White, an analyst with Topeka Capital Markets, in a Monday note to clients.

“Today’s iPad settlement is important and opens up the sale of the new iPad,” wrote White, who also noted that Apple had received clearance from the PRC’s Telecommunications Equipment Certification Center in late May.

“The new iPad was supposed to launch in the June quarter,” said White in a follow-up interview Monday, referring to the three-month period that ended Saturday, June 30.

Sales of the new iPad will now start in the third calendar quarter, the current period, said White.

He doesn’t expect that the delay will impact sales overall in the PRC. Instead, iPads that would have been sold last quarter — if Apple had not run into Proview and the Chinese courts — will be this quarter.

Or in some cases, those iPads have already been sold.

Several weeks ago, Apple removed its two-iPads-per-customer restriction in Hong Kong, a move that White read as prompted by heavy demand from customers in the PRC. “Many Apple products make their way over to the mainland [from Hong Kong],” White said.

Even more important to sales in the PRC, said White, is that the end of the trademark ruckus means Apple will be able to unveil a smaller iPad on the mainland later this year.

“We believe the launch of an iPad Mini — we expect September — will prove very popular in China,” said White, who was one of the analysts to first latch onto the idea that Apple would finally produce a so-called “iPad Mini” with a smaller screen, most likely one sized between 7 and 8 inches. the current iPad sports a 10.7-in. display.

“Ultimately, that’s the iPad that will sell in mainland China,” said White, who during his quarterly trips to Asia sees many more 7-in. non-Apple tablets than the larger iPads. “It’s not just the form factor, but also the price point [of an iPad Mini].”

Most analysts who buy into the idea of a small iPad, including White, believe it will be priced between $250 and $300. that range fits nicely into Apple’s existing iPad pricing structure, which starts at $399 for last year’s iPad 2 and $499 for this year’s model.

Andy Hargreaves of Pacific Crest, for example, issued a note to client (download PDF) last Thursday that predicted a $299 8GB 7.85-in. iPad Mini would debut in October. He estimated that Apple could sell 10 million of the smaller tablets in the year’s final quarter, and 35.2 million in Apple’s fiscal year 2013, which runs from Oct. 1, 2012 to Sept. 30, 2013.

A good portion of those smaller tablets would end up in Chinese hands, White said, pointing out the importance Apple places on its Greater China region of the PRC, Hong Kong and Taiwan.

The area was responsible for $7.9 billion in sales, or 20% of Apple’s total, for the quarter that ended March 31, a tripling from the same quarter the year before.

“Apple is catering to the Asian market,” said White, because of the sales opportunities there, as he cited a list of moves the company has made, including more China-specific features in the upcoming OS X Mountain Lion, due to launch this month, and the addition of Chinese support to iOS’ Siri voice-activated assistant in the pending iOS 6, likely to be released this fall.

Gregg Keizer covers Microsoft, security issues, Apple, Web browsers and general technology breaking news for Computerworld. Follow Gregg on Twitter at @gkeizer, or subscribe to Gregg’s RSS feed . His e-mail address is gkeizer@ix.netcom.com.

Read more about mobile and wireless in Computerworld’s Mobile and Wireless Topic Center.

Apple's $60M trademark deal opens way for iPad Mini in China, says analyst

Jun 25

Apple struggles to ban Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1

FRUIT THEMED LITIGATOR Apple has hit a hurdle in its effort to ban the Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 in the US.

A US appellate court had ordered US District Court Judge Lucy Koh to reconsider Apple’s request for a ban on sales of the 10.1in Galaxy Tab last month, after Apple’s bid to clear the tablet from store shelves initially was rejected.

However, Koh has said that her court “currently lacks jurisdiction to issue a preliminary injunction as requested by Apple because the Federal Circuit has not yet issued the mandate”. once this has been issued Apple will be able refile its request based on its claims that the Galaxy Tab 10.1 “slavishly copies” the Ipad.

“Each day that Samsung continues to sell its infringing Tab 10.1 causes additional harm to Apple through design dilution, lost sales, lost market share, and lost future sales of tag-along products,” Apple said in a court filing last month.

Last month, the US Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit wrote, “The district court has not determined the extent to which Samsung would be harmed if the sales of Galaxy Tab 10.1 were [banned], and how the potential harm to Samsung resulting from entering an injunction compares to the potential harm to Apple should the district court deny interim relief.”

“Nor has the district court evaluated the public interest at stake with respect to the sales of Samsung’s Galaxy Tab 10.1.”

Neither Samsung or Apple were available for comment at the time of writing. µ

Apple struggles to ban Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1

Feb 20

Apple vs. Samsung: Galaxy Tab 10.1 sales ban ...

Samsung was dealt a loss in its ongoing patent battle with Apple as the South Korean electronics maker's request to overturn a ban on the sale of its Galaxy Tab 10.1 tablet in Germany was denied.

A Dusseldorf regional appeals court upheld the August 2011 sales injunction of the Galaxy Tab 10.1 and said that Samsung's Galaxy Tab 8.9 also should be banned from being sold, according to a report on the website FOSS Patents by patent expert Florian Mueller.

Although the decision hurts Samsung, the ruling may also be a setback for Apple. The reasoning behind the court's decision wasn't because of Apple's claims that the Galaxy Tab 10.1 infringes on the design patents for the iPad tablet. rather, "the appeals court based its decision on a violation of German unfair competition law," Mueller reported.

The injunction against Galaxy Tab 10.1 sales in Germany cited Apple's design patents as the reasoning for pulling the Samsung tablet off store shelves.

In an effort to not miss out on the growing tablet market in Germany, Samsung redesigned the Galaxy Tab 10.1 and then re-released a new German version called the Galaxy Tab 10.1N, which is allowed to be sold, though Apple has requested a sales ban on that product too.

The Dusseldorf appeals court ruling is the latest in an international fight between Samsung, Apple and their respective teams of lawyers. last week, Apple was denied a requested sales ban on the Galaxy Tab 10.1 in the Netherlands, where the two companies are locked in a patent battle.

Earlier this month, Apple filed two new patent suits against Samsung in Germany, seeking a ban on 10 Samsung phones and five tablets. last month, a U.S. district court in San Jose denied Apple's request for a ban on the Galaxy Tab 10.1 before a July trial on Apple's lawsuit against Samsung in that court.

In December, a temporary ban on the Samsung tablet in Australia expired in a related suit between the two tech giants. The Australian dispute is set to go to trial in March, and other suits have been filed across Europe and Asia.

While the two companies are rivals and suing to block the sales of one another's products, Samsung and Apple are also business partners. Samsung, for example, manufactures the Apple-designed A4 and A5 processors found in the iPhone 4, iPhone 4S, iPad 2 and iPod Touch, among other components, such as flash memory, inside of many Apple devices.

RELATED:

Apple loses bid to ban Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 in Netherlands

Apple vs. Samsung: Galaxy Tab 10.1 sales ban lifted in Australia

Apple sues Samsung again in Germany, calls for ban on 10 phones

– Nathan Olivarez-Giles

Nathan Olivarez-Giles on Google+

Twitter.com/nateog

Photo: a Samsung Electronics' Galaxy Tab 10.1 tablet on display this month at a company showroom in Seoul. Credit: SeongJoon Cho/Bloomberg

Apple vs. Samsung: Galaxy Tab 10.1 sales ban upheld in Germany

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Oct 11

Tablets vs Netbooks: The final Face-off

An unrelenting tablets wave seems to be sweeping netbooks out of store shelves. even bored mothers are shunning the mother board. but, is this the end of the fight? Are tablets glorified media players or can they actually perform the job of a computer? Mahananda Bohidar and Ketaki Bhojnagarwala slug it out.

Mahi says

When I was a kid, correspondence with my brother, away in a residential school, involved sending inland letters and waiting for at least a couple of weeks to get one. I watched movies inserting a VHS tape into the player only to see the heroine’s face all grainy and mosaic-ed due to tape wear. Growing up, I listened to more static than music on the radio. Today, I can do all four on one device, at the same time, if I wanted to – without the downside mentioned above. The invention of tablets, like Steve Jobs mostly aptly put, has ‘revolutionised’ the way we communicate, work and play. When presented with more choices than one would need, it’s important that you separate the wheat from the chaff and see which tablet is The One for you.

Turning to tablets

Ever wondered why pulling out an iPad2 from a slingbag is now a more common sight than someone trying to retrieve a netbook or laptop? Portability. Most tablets weigh in anywhere between 400-800 grams – a fraction of the bulk of most netbooks sold today.

A lot of people reason that a tablet is a rather inconvenient device to type on. to fix the issue, most companies, not to mention third-party manufacturers, now have keyboard docks to go with their tablets. You could also jazz up your tab with speakers and charging docks, portfolios, wireless keyboards and travel bundles in all shapes, sizes and whacky designs – a range of customisation options that most netbooks do not offer.

Those who can’t decide on a dock can take a look at Asus Transformer TF101 or Lenovo IdeaPad U1 which serve as tablets as well as netbooks. and if not a physical addition you can always go the app way – download SWYPE or SwiftKey – to make typing a breeze.

In addition to role-playing as a tablet and a netbook, some devices in the market also serve as your tablet and a smartphone for example, Dell Streak and Acer Iconia Smart.

OS issues

With Apple’s and Android’s OSes dominating the tablet ecosystem, there seems to be a dearth of OS choices if you go for a tablet now. but, with the much-promising Windows 8 in the making, things are bound to get more interesting. Also, the issue of fragmented apps on the Android platform is to be fixed soon with the ‘Ice Cream Sandwich‘ which means you’ll have an OS that will adapt perfectly to smartphones and tablets.

No matter which OS you are running, a touch-based interface ensures that your experience is highly intuitive and maintains a low learning curve. no wonder then that when the iPad was launched there were several instances where, surprisingly, toddlers took to the iPad, like fish to water.

The likes of BlackBerry PlayBook and the new Samsung Galaxy Tabs have gone a step ahead and done away with physical buttons, letting you manipulate the entire OS with just gestures. with sensors like an accelerometer, gyroscope, G-sensor, GPS etc the experience of using a tablet is more engaging than working on a netbook. Imagine playing Angry Birds, Papi Jump or Drag Racing on a netbook – not half as much fun, is it?

Multitasking master

Tablets rule at multi-tasking. Check your mail while you listen to your favourite podcast, Skype while you are working on your spreadsheet or look busy as a bee while trying to get to the next level of Asphalt HD. Most tablets today run on 1GHz dual-core processors and it won’t be long before the numbers go up. There’ll be more power in your hands with NVIDIA Tegra announcing that they might launch quad-core technology in Android tablets this year. Qualcomm, too, is expected to come out with a tablet-optimised chip early next year. So, this remains future-proof.

The first few tablets did not offer as many connectivity ports as a netbook. new launches, however, also feature USB ports, HDMI ports and all the basic connectivity options. Upgrades in processing power and OSes will also lead to better, faster connectivity on tablets.

If you combine the apps available in the Android Market (2,50,000) and Apple App Store (5,00,000)– the two largest app arsenals – you’ll probably find enough to do with your tablet for two lifetimes. Not only do these apps, games and productivity software come relatively cheap, if not free, (compared to software and games running on Windows OS or MacOS on a netbook) but also adapt to various hardware that you might be using. Also, with Sony planning to launch two tablets before the year end – you might even see PlayStation games optimised to be played on those tablets!

One of the things I most enjoy doing on a tablet is reading digital publications. Magazines like Popular Science, TIME and GQ look gorgeous on the tablet displays, some of which outdo netbook screen resolutions. The freedom to switch the display orientation – for e-books, games, email clients, almost all apps that you have on your tablet – is a big plus considering netbooks aren’t flexible enough to let you do that.

Jump to the cloud

I save my word documents on Google Docs, listen to my favourite playlist on Grooveshark, upload all the snaps I click on to Picasa and Flickr. even if involuntarily, I have become a part of the exodus heading towards the cloud. as the need for physical storage spaces decline and you can access all your data through a wireless or 3G connection, it makes sense to own a tablet.

Tablets might also appeal to some with a green conscience as they reduce your carbon footprint. It’s not only to do with being smaller and using lesser material (mostly recyclable like aluminium and glass) but they also have longer battery lives and wake back instantly from the sleep mode to let you access your mails, music and games.

Which one’s yours?

Although the options are aplenty, you should pick up a tablet – not because it’s the most popular or it has the glossiest screen – but because it fulfils most of your needs. For a jet-setter who always needs to be in touch, something like the new iPad or the Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 might be a good choice owing to their slim form factors. For people who mainly use it for recreation and multimedia, the Motorola Xoom with its amazing speakers or the iPad 2 with its bright display would be a good buy to listen to music and watch movies on. if you are a blogger or a writer and still want to opt for a tablet, a device like the Asus Eee Pad Transformer might make sense. For bibliophiles (the electronic types), pick something with a big screen (8.9 or 10.1 inches) to make reading e-books as real as it can get. BlackBerry fans, have the option of the PlayBook that achieves its full potential when used in sync with a Blackberry handset.

Ketaki says

When netbooks were first introduced in the PC market, they were like a breath of fresh air for people who had to lug around their heavy laptops with them all the time – business travellers, students, office goers and even families on vacation. Shaving off more than a kilo or two in weight and sporting a screen size of 10-13 inches, netbooks became the ultimate portable computing device. The likes of Sony Vaio and Asus’ Eee seashell series looked cooler than lappies too.

However, the launch of the iPad by Apple led to a spurt of other tablets flooding the market, which had an almost guillotine-like effect on netbook sales. Longer battery life, more portable and an intuitive touch interface are just some of the reasons why many people are choosing tablets over netbooks as their secondary computing device. So is there still a market for the humble netbook? there might well be.

Plating it up

Most netbooks aren’t really great in the heavy performance or multitasking department, but they let you perform the basic activities that laptops are the most useful for – browsing, writing documents, watching videos or video chatting on Skype. and let’s face it that ticks most of the boxes in the list of an average person’s computing needs.

Netbooks have other advantages too. The primary one being a physical keyboard. Most of us don’t like the idea of long hours of typing or even using Gtalk on a touch screen device. It’s not comfortable and it’s definitely not as fast. Most netbooks nowadays come with island style or chiclet keyboards, like the one in the Acer happy 2, which take a bit of getting used to but are really great if you want to hammer it out.

Another advantage of netbooks is the fact that they have a lid, which means the screen is always protected, so you don’t have to worry about it being scratched.

A big plus in the hardware department is of course the inclusion of ports. Netbooks typically ship with a minimum of two USB ports, a card reader and an Ethernet port. Granted, many tablets now also have these features, but plug and play isn’t optimised on most tablets yet. even simple things like attaching an external optical drive or opening a word document from an external hard drive are tough to do in most tablets.

Another area where netbooks stand out is in storage capacity – some netbooks even ship with 500GB hard drives, whereas a tablet today only offers a maximum of 64GB. So you can store virtually all your media on a netbook and even carry a portable hard drive around for more.

Software issues

iOS has definitely improved a lot since the first iPad, and Windows 8 and Android Ice Cream Sandwich are being optimised for tablets. but there’s still a long way to go before tablets can become your number one computing device.

In a netbook, you can choose from either Windows, Linux or Apple’s latest operating system (in this case Lion). Netbooks are able to perform most tasks efficiently, and some of the higher-end versions are pretty good on the spec list. The ASUS Eee PC 1215B for instance runs an AMD E-350 processor and has 2GB of RAM, apart from USB 3.0 ports and an HDMI outlet. So while you may not be able to play power hungry games on this like StarCraft or Crysis 2, you should still be able to play most other PC games comfortably, as well as run multiple programs and even watch a flick.

Bottomline

As it stands today, netbooks can do most of what tablets can, but not vice-versa. You should opt for a netbook if your primary goal is product creation, because a better processor and physical keyboard will aid you here. Another factor to consider is that for many, netbooks can potentially be their primary computing device, especially if their needs aren’t too demanding. You can’t say the same for tablets though. and the price differential of about 50 per cent only adds to the list of pros for netbies.

Tablets vs Netbooks: The final Face-off

Oct 01

IFA 2011 Wrap-Up – SlashGear

IFA 2011 has come and gone, and there’s been no shortage of shiny new tech to play with. With the iPad still dominating consumer and industry mindshare, tablets unsurprisingly were a focus points for many, but there were big screens to marvel at in other segments, too. We won’t see many of the new toys hit store shelves for months, but that’s not going to stop us from lusting in advance. Head on past the cut for all the best devices from the show!

Disclosure: IFA contributed to SlashGear’s travel/accommodation costs. However, as always, there was no editorial control over what we covered, how we covered it, or which companies we met with.

Tablets

Samsung stole IFA 2010 with the original 7-inch Galaxy Tab, and the company brought along its successor to this year’s show. the Samsung Galaxy Tab 7.7 answers most of our complaints about the original: the slightly larger screen uses the company’s own Super AMOLED plus technology, runs at a higher 1280 x 800 resolution, is thinner, lighter and made from metal rather than plastic.

It’s not the only Honeycomb slate we saw, either. ViewSonic has targeted the more affordable end of the market with the ViewPad 7x, though its ViewPad 7e – which will be under $200 when it hits stores – falls back on Gingerbread to hit that price point. IFA was also a chance for companies to release their second-gen slates, with both Toshiba (with the AT200) and Lenovo (with the IdeaPad A1) addressing criticisms that their first models were oversized and ugly. Sony put plenty of money into its Tablet P and Tablet S launch, too, though our early review of the Tablet S left us somewhat unsure that it’ll be quite as successful as the company hopes.

Android and the tablets that run it continue to be overshadowed by legal concerns, however, with Samsung forced to pull the Galaxy Tab 7.7 from its IFA booth after Apple filed an injunction over patent infringement allegations. the German courts have already taken Apple’s side once, over the Galaxy Tab 10.1, and while Samsung went so far as to put stickers saying that there’d be no availability in Germany on each Tab 7.7 unit, that obviously wasn’t enough to stay the judge’s hand.

Smartphones

The stand-out phone from IFA actually could’ve fallen into the tablet category, too. Samsung continued its strong showing with the Galaxy Note, a 5.3-inch 1280 x 800 Super AMOLED HD smartphone running Android 2.3 Gingerbread and offering a digital “S Pen” stylus that can be used to annotate, take handwritten notes, and more. It’s not exactly a new concept – HTC tried it with the Flyer, after all – but the difference is that the inking experience works on the Galaxy Note: the virtual ink flow is smooth and precise enough to make using it as a notepad replacement realistic. whether mainstream users will blanch at the size remains to be seen, however.

Samsung Galaxy Note close-up:

Also thinking big is the HTC Titan, one of the company’s two new Windows Phone 7 Mango devices and, as the name hints at, packing a sizable display: 4.7-inches in this case. it also brings a faster processor than we’re used to: 1.5GHz, as opposed to the 1GHz benchmark of first-gen Windows Phones. one aspect we’re particularly excited about is the camera, with HTC using a back-illuminated, f2.2 sensor that promises to answer criticisms of patchy low-light performance in previous devices. That’s shared with HTC’s other new Mango handset, the smaller Radar.

Ultrabooks

Call them a cynical rebranding of ultraportables or a semi-desperate attempt to claw away sales from the MacBook Air, but Intel’s ultrabook segment got some high-profile support from big-name brands in Berlin this past week. Acer, Lenovo and Toshiba all brought models to IFA, attempting to balance Apple-rivaling style with the sort of connectivity PC users expect.

Toshiba arguably does the best on that front, managing to squeeze ethernet, HDMI and VGA into the Portege Z830, along with three USB ports (one of which is USB 3.0), audio in/out and an SD card reader. still, the Lenovo IdeaPad U300s finds room for USB 3.0 and HDMI, and all in a particularly attractive chassis with an eye-catching routed-edge design. Lastly there’s the Acer Aspire S3, which promises to best the Air on multimedia performance thanks to its Dolby Home Theater tuning.

The rest…

Samsung didn’t have an ultrabook, but it did have the Series 7 Chronos. while we weren’t entirely convinced by the Apple-esque styling, the company’s advanced LCD technology – which means you get roughly an inch extra of screen compared to what would normally fit into each chassis – complete with anti-reflective finish and super-strength brightness lent no small degree of appeal.

Toshiba’s utterly vast 55-inch HDTV, the ZL2, was hard to avoid, offering as it did glasses-free 3D using a face-tracking system similar to that we’ve seen on recent Toshiba notebooks. Unfortunately the company still isn’t committing to a release date.

Finally, there were the more unusual products and prototypes. the Fraunhofer Institute brought along its flickering-LED based Visible Light Communication networking system, bypassing WiFi and ethernet, in what could make for flight- and hospital-safe high-speed connectivity. Then there was E Ink’s Triton color epaper display, as well as confirmation that LG, Sony, Samsung and HP are all beavering away on flexible ereader panels.

What we didn’t see…

Big screen TVs were certainly in evidence at IFA, but we’re still yet to see a meaningful, joined-up Smart TV experience. Apple’s continued treatment of the Apple TV as more of a hobby than a focus has left the door open for other firms to take the lead, but beyond some basic DLNA streaming there’s still little in the way of linked thinking about how a home with multiple screens of a broad range of sizes will play best together.

Wrap-Up

Just as it did with CES 2011, Apple managed to cast a significant shadow over IFA 2011 despite not even being in attendance. the injunction against Samsung’s Galaxy Tab 7.7 was the Cupertino company’s most obvious impact, but the specters of the iPhone 5 and iPad 3 waiting in the wings were the unmentioned black cloud on many vendors’ horizons.

Perhaps as a result – or perhaps because the tech market as a whole is saturated with more segments and sub-segments than it can stomach – many of the announcements felt evolutionary rather than revolutionary. That’s not to say that the Galaxy Note, Portege Z830 and HTC Titan aren’t interesting devices, but they’re refinements on a theme more than anything else. on the flip side, though, refinement is what’s needed if each company wants to compete, and that adds up to not only more consumer choice overall but a generally stronger selection to choose from.

You can read all our show coverage by using the IFA 2011 tag, and don’t forget to let us know what your favorite product(s) are in the comments!

IFA 2011 Wrap-Up – SlashGear

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