The idea of making phone calls on a tablet is still a fairly new one,
but it is apparently an idea that is catching on... in Asia, at least.
This might not be much of a surprise, actually, because it is something
of a natural progression for the region. The Asia/Pacific excluding
Japan (APeJ) region has been where phablets have been very popular. The
theory is that users in those regions can't afford both a phone and a
tablet, so the phablet was a perfect catch-all device.
However,
new numbers from IDC make it seem like users were simply waiting for
voice-enabled tablets. According to IDC’s Worldwide Quarterly Tablet
Tracker report, there were about 13.8 million tablets shipped in the
APeJ region in Q2 2014, and a full 25% of those were voice-enabled
devices. This is a huge jump for voice-enabled tablets, the category up
60% year-over-year. In some emerging markets, like India and Indonesia,
voice enabled tablets have almost reached 50% market share.
Interestingly,
all of the tablets shipped in this segment are Android devices, which
also isn't so surprising, given that there are no iOS or Windows tablets
that make phone calls. It also should be noted that there's no
guarantee that these voice-enabled tablets are being used for phone
calls. Shipments correlate to sales, but sales doesn't exactly predict
usage.
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