iPad vs. Ultrabook: Picking the Perfect Next-Gen Laptop

What we found was rather interesting -- it was the Kindle Fire we couldn't live without, and while the iPad proved the better product for communication, for actually getting the job done the Toshiba Ultrabook we brought won out.
Let me explain.
FaceTime Fill the Gap

But when it came to talking long distance, Apple's FaceTime filled the gap because my wife's sisters and our neighbor who was watching our house all have iPads, which kept our phone bill out of the stratosphere.
Ultrabook in a Flash

We also noticed that the iPad often had trouble connecting to the network. In fact, there were people running around the resort complaining that their iPads weren't working while the Ultrabook, phones and Kindles seemed to have few issues. This has turned into a common problem when we travel with the iPad: Wi-Fi connectivity seems iffy.
I had lunch with a Cisco engineer a few weeks back and he said that this is a known problem with Apple products and most wireless routers. The fix is to use Apple routers, which apparently provide the best connectivity of any home-class router in the market. Enterprise-class routers from Cisco and others evidently don't have these problems, but hotels and small foreign airports often use home or small-business products which is why, according to the Cisco engineer, we were seeing this problem.
As you would expect, the Ultrabook, because it has a keyboard, was vastly better for writing longer, even though we brought along the Bluetooth keyboard that we have for the iPad. The much larger screen helped, as well. However, jumping back and forth often had us trying to control Ultrabook by touching its screen because we had gotten so used to how the iPad worked.
In the end, it became clear that what we wanted was a blend of the two products -- the utility, connectivity and practicality of the Ultrabook, and the iPad's touch capabilities coupled with FaceTime.
The Perfect Future Product: Microsoft vs. Apple

But as FaceTime remains unblocked, if Apple gets this done right first, it they will take an even more impressive share of this market than is currently enjoys. But to win in the corporate market, it will need to make FaceTime more of a business solution than it currently is -- Skype already has broad business penetration, but that does no good if Skype is blocked.
In the end, the fourth quarter is likely to be quite interesting, because whichever company gets this done right first is likely to own the mobile laptop segment.
Rob is president and principal analyst of the Enderle Group. Previously, he was the Senior Research Fellow for Forrester Research and the Giga Information Group. Prior to that he worked for IBM and held positions in Internal Audit, Competitive Analysis, Marketing, Finance, and Security. Currently, Rob writes on emerging technology, security, and Linux for a wide variety of publications and appears on national news TV shows that include CNBC, FOX, Bloomberg and NPR.
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