Showing posts with label ipad numbers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ipad numbers. Show all posts

Friday, May 7, 2010

Apple Spreads iPad Magic to Nine More Countries, with Another Nine to Come in July

Apple has just announced that it will begin taking pre-orders on Monday and release shipments May 28 to ship all iPad models including the newly available 3G + wifi model to nine countries beyond US borders: Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Spain, Switzerland and the UK.

In a release that repeats last week's numbers for iPad, App Store, and iBooks sales to date, the company also told iPad Nation Daily that it intends to expand the iPad's international reach even further, in July, to Austria, Belgium, Hong Kong, Ireland, Luxembourg, Mexico, Netherlands, New Zealand and Singapore.

Here's the guts of Apple's news release:


iPad Available in Nine More Countries on May 28


Pre-Orders Begin May 10
CUPERTINO, Calif., May 7 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Apple® today announced that iPad™ will be available in Australia, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Spain, Switzerland and the UK on Friday, May 28. Customers can pre-order all iPad models from Apple's online store in all nine countries beginning on Monday, May 10. In the US, Apple has already sold over one million iPads and customers have downloaded over 12 million apps from the App Store, as well as over 1.5 million ebooks from the new iBookstore.
iPad allows users to connect with their apps and content in a more intimate, intuitive and fun way than ever before. Users can browse the web, read and send email, enjoy and share photos, watch HD videos, listen to music, play games, read ebooks and much more, all using iPad's revolutionary Multi-Touch™ user interface. iPad is 0.5 inches thin and weighs just 1.5 pounds—thinner and lighter than any laptop or netbook—and delivers up to 10 hours of battery life.*
The App Store on iPad lets you wirelessly browse, buy and download new apps from the world's largest app store. iPad includes 12 new innovative apps designed especially for iPad and will run almost all of the more than 200,000 apps on the App Store, including apps already purchased for your iPhone® or iPod touch®. Developers have created more than 5,000 exciting new apps designed for iPad that take advantage of its Multi-Touch interface, large screen and high-quality graphics.
Pricing & Availability
Apple plans to release iPad in Austria, Belgium, Hong Kong, Ireland, Luxembourg, Mexico, Netherlands, New Zealand and Singapore in July. Apple will announce availability, local pricing and pre-order plans for these nine additional countries at a later date.
*Battery life depends on device settings, usage and other factors. Actual results vary.
Apple ignited the personal computer revolution with the Apple II, then reinvented the personal computer with the Macintosh. Apple continues to lead the industry with its award-winning computers, OS X operating system, and iLife, iWork and professional applications. Apple leads the digital music revolution with its iPods and iTunes online store, has reinvented the mobile phone with its revolutionary iPhone and App Store, and has recently introduced its magical iPad which is defining the future of mobile media and computing devices.
© 2010 Apple Inc. All rights reserved. Apple, the Apple logo, Mac, Mac OS, Macintosh, iPad, Multi-Touch, iPhone, iPod touch, Apple Store and iBooks are trademarks of Apple. Other company and product names may be trademarks of their respective owners.

Friday, April 9, 2010

Parsing Steve Jobs' Numbers: 450,000 iPads Sold, 600,000 iBooks Downloads, But What's Really Going On?

By Stephen Windwalker, Editor of Kindle Nation


There are some interesting numbers floating around about the iPad and its iBooks Store, and some of them seem to merit a closer look.

First, congratulations to Apple and Steve Jobs for an impressive rollout of a pretty cool device, and for being reasonably straightforward with the public in sharing some numbers. Given how close Amazon plays such numbers to the vest, covering the Kindle is a bit like navigating through heavy fog by comparison.

Jobs appeared at an iPhone event on Apple's Cupertino campus yesterday and led off with a bit of an iPad progress report, as reported in a New York Times blog and elsewhere.

Jobs said that there were 300,000 iPads sold "on the first day," and that the cumulative total as of today's even was 450,000. This is impressive, but it makes me wonder:
  • It was widely reported that there were at least 125,000 iPad pre-orders on the weekend of March 12-14, the first weekend when pre-orders were taken. So, if those 125,000 were counted in the 300,000 first-day total, as one would expect, does that mean that the total number ordered and sold fresh on Saturday, between all Apple Stores and other retailers like Best Buy, was only 175,000?
  • How many pre-orders were recorded from March 15 to the beginning of April and included in the 300,000 April 3 sales? If those totalled 5,000 a day, could that mean there were only 125,000 fresh sales on April 3?
Don't get me wrong: 450,000 iPads sold to date at the various iPad price points means over $250 million at retail, which, as I said, is impressive. The online Apple Store shows a slight shipping delay right now, and Jobs said today that "we're not making enough right now" and that he "heard Best Buy was sold out." And Apple has yet to reveal anything about the number of iPad 3G pre-orders fir late April shipment, which could conceivably double the volume of wifi iPad orders.

At the same time, when we become so accustomed to expecting magical things from Apple (and it's been Apple's choice to use the word a fair amount lately), something like the actual sales figures can seem a little underwhelming. 

After waiting over the course of the last year or two for the launch of the iTablet or the iSlate or the iPad, one naturally expected there to be some pent-up demand, and there was. But that iPad Fever seems to have been roughly equivalent to the pent-up demand that led Amazon, on its February 23, 2009 release date for the Kindle 2, to ship roughly a quarter of a million units after several months of waiting. 

250,000 units in a day, 300,000 units in a day, those are great days for a new product. But Apple has shipped 50 million iPhones and another 35 million iPod Touches, so one is almost inclined to say "ho-hum" at launch-day sales in the low six figures.

There were other numbers from Steve Jobs today, specifically about ebook sales. 

He said that there had been 250,000 ebook downloads from the iBooks Store within the first 24 hours, and 600,000 ebook downloads in all so far (which means about 90,000 per day after the first 24 hours). He didn't say how many iPad owners had downloaded the free iBooks app, so it's impossible to suss out the relative numbers of iBooks visitors and Kindle for iPad visitors, or how many books the average visitor is buying and downloading. 

250,000 downloads in a day seems impressive, doesn't it? But for those publishing industry observers who see salvation when they see Steve Jobs, it may be worth noting by comparison that as early as October 2008, when the Kindle's installed base was not much larger than the iPad's installed base is today, there were a handful of Kindle Store authors who were experiencing daily Kindle Store sales of over a thousand copies per individual title. Cumulatively, over the 28-month life of the Kindle, it is very likely there have been over 300 million ebooks downloaded from the Kindle Store. This estimate, of course, includes Kindle books downloaded to a growing range of Kindle-compatible devices that now includes the iPad.

One interesting if minor disconnect, at present, is in the two listings of bestselling "free apps" for books that one finds in the two iterations of Apple's App Store that appear, respectively, on the iPad itself and in the iTunes Store's App department that comes up on a computer:
  • In the iPad's rendering of the App Store, the iBooks app is listed as the #1 top free iPad app. There's not another "books" listing in the top 20, but a public domain app called Free Books is #21, a great Marvel Comics app is #22, and the Kindle for iPad app is #24 as of 8 p.m. EDT April 8.
  • Meanwhile, if you look at the Top Free Apps under "books" in the iTunes Store's App department as it comes up on a computer, the Kindle app is #1 and the iBooks app is nowhere to be found. 
Some of this disparity would seem to be about the fact that the Kindle app is also an iPhone app, and the underlying fact that there are nearly 200 times as many iPhones and iPod Touches that can run it as the number of iPads that can run the iBooks app. But it does seem as if there may be some effort on Apple's part -- perhaps inadvertent? maybe they forgot there was something called the Kindle? -- to tilt the playing field when one initiates a search for iPad-compatible books apps in the iTunes Store's App department and finds dozens of apps listed, but no Kindle for iPad app:

Naturally, with a catalog that is less than 10 percent of the Kindle Store's catalog after adjusting each store's list to omit free public domain titles, it will take the iBooks Store a while to compete seriously with the Kindle catalog regardless of the liberties that may be taken with home field advantage. But it does seem clear that, with each iPad sold, the future looks brighter and brighter for both Apple and Amazon.