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Counterfeit Ipads hit the market

Posted: 2010-04-27 01:19am
by mr friendly guy
linky
Counterfeit iPads hit the market
April 27, 2010 - 12:09PM

Just three weeks after the US launch, bootleg versions of Apple's hot-selling iPad tablet PCs have begun showing up on the shelves of online and real-world shops in piracy-prone China.

Apple recently delayed the iPad's international launch after huge demand in the United States caught the maker of trendy iPhones and MacBooks off guard. But Chinese consumers looking for knock-offs of the company's latest must-have product need look no further than a teeming electronics mall in Shenzhen, the southern Chinese boomtown near the border with Hong Kong.

Here, tiny shops are stuffed with pirated versions of everything: from Microsoft's newest Windows 7 operating system, a steal at US$2 ($2.15) each, to a range of Apple products, from iPhones to MacBooks and the lightweight MacBook Air.

After extensive queries with multiple shopkeepers, one surnamed Lin offered the sought-after item in a dark backroom on the market's fifth floor away from the hustle and bustle.

Hefty and thickset with three USB ports and a more rectangular shape than the original, this knock-off with iPad aspirations, which runs a Windows operating system, looks more like a giant iPhone. It costs 2800 yuan ($442), making it slightly cheaper than the iPad's cheapest $499 ($538) price tag.

"This is just the first rough version," says Lin a crew-cut agent speaking in bursts of quick-fire Cantonese.

"While the shape isn't quite the same, the external appearance is very similar to the iPad, so we don't think it will affect our sales that much," he added, explaining the difference was due to the difficulty sourcing matching parts because of the quick two-month turnaround time for the first version's development.

Hard-working Chinese bootleggers are rushing to fill a vacuum that won't last for long, created by unexpectedly strong demand for the iPad in its first weeks on the market.

The 10-inch entertainment device, on which one can read books, play music and videos and surf the Internet, sold more than 500,000 in its first week alone, and continued strong U.S. demand has led Apple to delay the product's international launch to the end of April.

Chinese counterfeiters have rushed to fill the iPad gap.

Taobao, China's largest online marketplace, contains hundreds of listings for the coveted product, many real but some dubiously labeled as "China goods," with claims to have even better features than the real deal.

Like the models in the Shenzhen market, these fake iPads also retail for around 2800 yuan each, compared with 4000-6000 yuan for those marketed as real.

Analysts and gadget fanatics expect the iPad to do well in Asia given Apple's strong branding and the rising number of affluent middle class consumers. But few are surprised by the quick appearance of a counterfeit version in a country where pirated movies often appear in markets in the same week of their theatrical release.

"China is basically a market that has the ability to clone everything, so it's really not surprising," said Edward Yu, chief executive of Beijing-based researcher Analysys International.

"I don't think piracy is a bad thing for the iPad given that China has a huge population, maybe the clone iPads will give more of the potential users a look and feel."

Back in Shenzhen, Lin said factories around China's Pearl River Delta -- the country's biggest export manufacturing hub -- were working hard on an updated version of the pirated iPads to feed strong demand.

"This is just the first rough version," Lin said. "Eventually, the factories will be able to make a much better copy."

Reuters
Maybe its just me, but the attraction of something like an Ipad to me is that its cheaper than a laptop and it has pretty much the features I need in a laptop for the purpose of conferences, courses etc that is view documents and play video files. The fact that it can also do lots of apps is a bonus. As such when it is released in Australia I will consider getting it sometime down the line. However, the drawback is that apple (from what I understand) is limiting software on it, unlike a laptop which you can install windows or other window based applications on it. Unfortunately I use a PC and as such am familiar with windows.

Now this counterfeit model uses windows, and assuming it doesn't break when you look at it the wrong way.. can't they market this in its own right? I would have thought the fact that it doesn't have Apple's restriction on which software can go on it would be a plus. Its not like equivalent programs aren't available elsewhere.

The other thing which strikes me, is since this is targeted at the Chinese market, can't they create one with a program that reads written chinese. My parents had installed such a program where you could write Chinese down and the software recognises it, and that software must be almost a decade old now. This is supposedly a touch screen, so I would have thought if they tweaked that feature into it, it would be a winner.

Re: Counterfeit Ipads hit the market

Posted: 2010-04-27 01:23am
by Stark
I think you're underestimating how rubbish it is. I've got a lot of experience with no-brand knockoffs of popular products, from phones to media boxes, and the emphasis is on APPEARING to be the same for as cheap as possible. There is no way I'd buy a Windows-based tablet for slightly less than an iPad if it pretended to have a decent touchscreen as well.

Ironically Apple's products don't just read east asian languages, but have the best support for inputting them I have ever seen. My girlfriend tells me that alone is an iPhone selling point in the asian community (even though patriotism sees many Taiwanese buying horrible HTCs instead).

Re: Counterfeit Ipads hit the market

Posted: 2010-04-27 01:24am
by General Zod
Nothing really new or surprising honestly. There's a regular article on Engadget specifically for knockoffs like this where you have everything from Sony Vaio knockoffs to "iPhones" that are really dumbphones built into a clickwheel iPod shell.

Re: Counterfeit Ipads hit the market

Posted: 2010-04-27 01:26am
by Stark
Ipod shell-alikes are extraordinarily common, and some of them are using a wheel-shaped d-pad. The selling point is always that it LOOKS like an Ipod and plays music, but is a fraction of the cost (because it's rubbish). There's a serious market for this stuff.

Re: Counterfeit Ipads hit the market

Posted: 2010-04-27 01:31am
by General Zod
Stark wrote:Ipod shell-alikes are extraordinarily common, and some of them are using a wheel-shaped d-pad. The selling point is always that it LOOKS like an Ipod and plays music, but is a fraction of the cost (because it's rubbish). There's a serious market for this stuff.
I'm just going to leave this link here. :)

http://www.engadget.com/search/?q=ipod+ ... =wl-gadget

Re: Counterfeit Ipads hit the market

Posted: 2010-04-27 01:33am
by Stark
Some of us have actualy experience and don't just read a website that recieves stolen goods? :)

Re: Counterfeit Ipads hit the market

Posted: 2010-04-27 01:36am
by General Zod
Stark wrote:Some of us have actualy experience and don't just read a website that recieves stolen goods? :)
Pfft, like I can waste time or money actually looking into genuine fake mercahndise. Easier to just leave a link.

Re: Counterfeit Ipads hit the market

Posted: 2010-04-27 01:45am
by Stark
If you read endgadget, your time is literally worthless. :)

MFG, you should pop into a Myer or something and set their demo Touch to chinese input; it allows you to use roman characters, characters or the crazy sound-alphabet thing I forget the name of. The hint and predictive stuff works really well, apparently.

Re: Counterfeit Ipads hit the market

Posted: 2010-04-27 02:46am
by mr friendly guy
Stark wrote:
MFG, you should pop into a Myer or something and set their demo Touch to chinese input; it allows you to use roman characters, characters or the crazy sound-alphabet thing I forget the name of. The hint and predictive stuff works really well, apparently.
You mean pin yin (拼音)? If it could use Chinese language programs that would be cool since I am trying to pick it up again in my spare time, however the main features I want in such a device is to play video files, and to read documents namely word, excel and adobe PDF ones. And the fact that its lighter than a laptop but has a big screen makes it great.

Re: Counterfeit Ipads hit the market

Posted: 2010-04-27 04:04am
by Lonestar
Stark wrote:If you read endgadget, your time is literally worthless. :)
I work the graveyard shift in a guv'ment NOC. OF COURSE my time is worthless. Also, it was gizmodo that had the stolen goods, not engadget. :P

Re: Counterfeit Ipads hit the market

Posted: 2010-04-27 06:04am
by Stark
GODDAMN ERRORS OF FACT. :evil:

MFG, it supports 'handwriting' (ie, per-stroke character drawing), pinyin and zhuyin. My gf uses zhuyin mostly.

Re: Counterfeit Ipads hit the market

Posted: 2010-05-03 08:58am
by Admiral Valdemar
Stark wrote:GODDAMN ERRORS OF FACT. :evil:

MFG, it supports 'handwriting' (ie, per-stroke character drawing), pinyin and zhuyin. My gf uses zhuyin mostly.
Wait, really? I thought Apple didn't go for that whole handwriting recognition at all. I guess that would be a bitch for the Asian glyph input, and I always saw touchscreens as having the writing function by default anyway, even back with my old Casio E-105.