Tech Broiler

Jason Perlow and Scott Raymond

Why Ice Cream Sandwich won't be able to save Android tablets

By | January 4, 2012, 2:33pm PST

Summary: While more responsive and with an improved browser, Ice Cream Sandwich still doesn’t address the fundamental flaws with Android on tablet computers.

For the last day, I’ve been tinkering around with Google’s Ice Cream Sandwich (ICS) 4.0.3 OS on my Motorola XOOM.

Motorola hasn’t yet released the updated software for its tablet officially, but I was able to get the latest version of Android running due to work being done by various open source community teams at XDA-Developers, a popular forums site for Android development and hacking.

I’ve actually managed to try three separate ICS builds for the XOOM, just to get a sense of what stage the code is currently in. Motorola is reportedly now testing its official software release for their tablets with a pilot group of users, so that means if you own a XOOM, you should be receiving it via an over-the-air (OTA) update within a month.

Right now, all of the builds that are out from the community are essentially “Vanilla” based on code from the Android Open Source Project (AOSP) although they have a few additional tweaks for things such as overclocking if you really want to dive into that sort of stuff.

There are other community-supported unofficial ICS builds out for other tablets such as the Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 and the Asus Transformer — all of which of course require “rooting” your device and installing ClockWorkMod on it, an open source firmware manager utility.

Unless you know what you’re doing, I don’t suggest going this route with your Android tablet.

Currently, the three “team” builds I have looked at do not have functioning cameras/HDMI ports and have a number of other minor issues, but for the most part the aesthetics and general operation of the software more or less closely reflects what will end up being released within several weeks by Motorola as well as by other Android tablet OEMs.

With the acknowledgement that what I’m playing with right now does have bugs and in no way should be considered a production software release or an officially supported build by Motorola, overall, Ice Cream Sandwich is definitely an improvement over Honeycomb.

The software runs considerably faster, the user interface is more responsive overall and the browser renders pages more fluidly, which has always been one of my major complaints about the OS.

However, while existing Honeycomb tablet owners will see this software as a welcome improvement to what they were using before, I don’t see Ice Cream Sandwich as being some sort of magic bullet that is suddenly going to propel Android tablets into major market share territory (with the one major exception being Amazon’s Kindle Fire).

Right now, all of the Honeycomb tablets currently in use which are due for the ICS upgrade only occupy about a 3.3% share of the total Android install base. That’s not a heck of a lot. Most of the Android that’s out there is running on handsets.

Amazon’s Kindle Fire, which has supposedly sold millions of devices over the 2011 holiday season, runs on a modified version of 2.3.5, aka Gingerbread. As such it’s heavily supplementing the large percentage of 2.3.x smartphone devices that are already in circulation as reported by Google — most of which will not be upgraded to ICS.

[Note: If you didn't understand that last paragraph, it means that the Kindle Fire is not even being counted in Google's metrics, but by virtue of selling millions of units, it vastly increases the amount of 2.3.x Gingerbread in the wild. Capische?]

Also Read:

The last time I compared Android as a tablet OS versus Android as a smartphone OS side by side back in April of last year, the two implementations were not at version parity. Until now, the most current smartphone implementation was version 2.3.x (Gingerbread) and the most current tablet implementation was Honeycomb (3.x).

Also Read:

The initial release of Honeycomb 3.0 was absolutely rife with problems. The OS had all sorts of application compatibility and overall stability issues which made the original XOOM I owned (and subsequently returned) a nightmare to use.

Over the course of that year 3.1 and later on 3.2 improved stability issues considerably. For testing purposes, I tried my luck again with the Wi-Fi version of the XOOM, when my ZDNet colleague Scott Raymond decided to sell me his for a generous discount when he decided he wanted a thinner, but very similar Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1 instead.

Boys must have their toys, you know.

Had Scott not decided to give me a nice break on his barely-used XOOM, I would have never spent full price on the tablet, even at the $500.00 price parity with iPad 2 they were selling the devices at the time.

Today, you can pick up a 32GB Wi-Fi XOOM for about $450 and a 16GB Galaxy Tab for about the same. The Asus Transformer which is based on the same nVidia Tegra 2 guts will run you about $400.

The Asus Transformer Prime, which sports the new nVidia Tegra 3 Kal-El quad-core processor, will set you back about $500. Like the XOOM and the Galaxy Tab 10.1 it’s also due for a Android 4.0 update shortly.

[EDIT: I had previously stated that the Transformer Prime cost $600, but that was for the 64GB version.]

With the exception of Amazon’s Kindle Fire, I still think all Android tablets are seriously overpriced. Software update or not, that’s still going to be a major issue with consumers making decisions about what tablet to buy this year.

At least one major Android tablet manufacturer that I know of is due to release an 8GB 10.1 inch device in the next several days in the sub-$330.00 range. I think that’s a good start, but it’s not enough.

So then why is everyone so jazzed about the new software update? It’s because Google’s Ice Cream Sandwich (ICS) version 4.0.3 finally brings Android smartphones and tablets into a single unified codebase.

[Next: Android Code Unification does not equate to Market Expansion]»

Topics

Jason Perlow, Sr. Technology Editor at ZDNet, is a technologist with over two decades of experience integrating large heterogeneous multi-vendor computing environments in Fortune 500 companies.

Disclosure

Jason Perlow

My Full-Time Employer is IBM. I write as a freelancer for ZDNet.

Disclaimer: The postings and opinions on this blog are my own and don't necessarily represent IBM's positions, strategies or opinions.

I own no investments or direct financial instruments in the companies I write about.

Biography

Jason Perlow

Jason Perlow, Sr. Technology Editor at ZDNet is a technologist with over two decades of experience with integrating large heterogeneous multi-vendor computing environments in Fortune 500 companies. A long-time computer enthusiast starting the age of 13 with his first Apple ][ personal computer, he began his freelance writing career starting at ZD Sm@rt Reseller in 1996 and has since authored numerous guest columns for ZDNet Enterprise and Ziff-Davis Internet. Jason was previously Senior Technology Editor for Linux Magazine, where he wrote about Open Source issues from 1999 to 2008.

In his spare time, Jason is an avid amateur chef and food writer, where his work reviewing New Jersey restaurants has appeared in The New York Times. He is also the founder of the popular food web site eGullet and blogs about restaurants and cooking at OffTheBroiler.com.

Talkback Most Recent of 293 Talkback(s)

  • RE: Why Ice Cream Sandwich won't be able to save Android tablets
    Way to take the super scenic literary route to conveying your lust for Apple. Using an unofficial release of ICS to boot. Yawn.
    ZDNet Gravatar
    nizzlebean
    4th Jan
  • RE: Why Ice Cream Sandwich won't be able to save Android tablets
    @nizzlebean It is sad isn't it! They write about products being unfinished, site no examples of failures (I'm speaking of his initial XOOM / Honeycomb review) and yet get away with calling it half baked!

    It is a good thing these reviews didn't have to go through a jury of their peers or they would never get an article posted!
    ZDNet Gravatar
    Peter Perry
    5th Jan
  • ZDNet Blogger

    RE: Why Ice Cream Sandwich won't be able to save Android tablets
    @Peter Perry jury of their peers.
    ZDNet Gravatar
    jperlow
    4th Jan
    • Flagged
  • RE: Why Ice Cream Sandwich won't be able to save Android tablets
    @Peter Perry
    A jury of their piers might get them docked.
    ZDNet Gravatar
    DannyO_0x98
    4th Jan
  • RE: Why Ice Cream Sandwich won't be able to save Android tablets
    @Peter Perry

    Cite, not site.

    As for your comments - garbage!
    ZDNet Gravatar
    Habiloso
    4th Jan
  • RE: Why Ice Cream Sandwich won't be able to save Android tablets
    @Peter Perry

    I haven't had any issues with my Xoom. I use it mainly for remote desktop diagnostics and playing games. I get the occasional force close on an app, but that also happens on my Incredible 2.
    ZDNet Gravatar
    Brian Jones
    5th Jan
  • RE: Why Ice Cream Sandwich won't be able to save Android tablets
    @Peter Perry: I guess that as far as we iOS users (in my case, both an iPhone 4 and iPad 2), we rest assured that our operating systems - which we don't spend a lot of time talking or fretting about - are "baked."
    ZDNet Gravatar
    bill@...
    5th Jan
  • RE: Why Ice Cream Sandwich won't be able to save Android tablets
    @Habiloso garbage? Prove it?

    As for the spelling, I am trying to type this stuff on my iPhone and it is hard enough fighting with it when it wants to correct good words let alone my own spelling mistakes so give me break!
    ZDNet Gravatar
    Peter Perry
    5th Jan
  • RE: Why Ice Cream Sandwich won't be able to save Android tablets
    @Peter Perry I purchased the Xoom WiFi when it was released because it was the closest to a Nexus we have in the tablet arena. I have used it everyday since, and it has been reliable, stable, and overall a pleasurable experience. Yes, there were some incompatible 3rd party apps when Honeycomb was first released, but they were soon upgraded, and / or there were alternative, stable apps available to accomplish the same tasks. Similar situation happens when any mobile OS (including iOS) releases a new version.

    I have to reset my iPad 2 as often as the Xoom. The iPad 2 may not give me a forced close message when it freezes / crashes, but it still freezes / crashes as often as the Xoom, and requires a power off / restart.

    The amount of tablet specific apps is not that big an issue for me. I respect others may feel differently, but my experience is most Android apps scale up much better to the larger tablet screens than iOS (iOS uses small portion of screen, or zoom with high pixelation), and accomplishing a specific task is the most important reason I purchase an app. I have found that a large number of those iPad specific apps I have purchased are basically a rehash of the iPhone app with better graphics so you won't get the pixel headache. No additional info, or features, just better graphics to eliminate the pixelation problem which doesn't occur that often with most Android apps I use. Yes, the iPad specific app may have an additional panel (or two), but the extra panel is frequently just a copy of a previous discrete screen from the smartphone app which you hope has an option of closing since you may not want it displayed full time. Have also found that many Android apps I upgrade in the automatic upgrade process have additional panels that show on the Note, or Android tablets, but are a discrete screen on the smaller smartphones yet they are not advertised as tablet specific / optimized.

    I have not used ICS on a tablet yet, but have used it on the Galaxy Nexus, and a Nexus S which has already received the OTA update. ICS is nice, and certainly looks a bit more elegant. I am a former Windows Mobile power user thrown under the bus by Microsoft when WP7 was released. iOS, and WP 7 do not allow me to accomplish the tasks I need when out for the day, Android does. Being a gadget addict, I have a plethora of devices most running Froyo, Gingerbread, Honeycomb, and recently ICS. When I switch for one version to another, it takes about 10 seconds to adjust to the different version. Eventually, my Android tablets will be upgraded to ICS, and the Note (best smartphone I have every used, your mileage may vary) is scheduled for an ICS update in early 2012. In the near future, I will be using the same version on all my frequently used Android devices, but in the interim, no problem switching among the different versions I currently use.
    ZDNet Gravatar
    gadgetlover
    5th Jan
  • RE: Why Ice Cream Sandwich won't be able to save Android tablets
    @Peter Perry I've had so many more apps crash in iOS4 (including native and officially released Apple ones) on my iTouch generation 3, vs. Android 2.3.4 (latest Gingerbread) running on my HTC device, it's not even possible to count. the 'forced close' on my Android are so infrequent, there's virtually no comparison in my one little case. though I'm a long term heavy user of both, I rarely complain about either. just my observation / experience.

    of course by most theories, ICS should be head and shoulders above Gingerbread, and what I've seen on it on certain handhelds it looks extremely nice. so we'll see how that plays out in practice when it's scaled up to tablets.
    ZDNet Gravatar
    bri719
    5th Jan
  • I thought the flaw was it's minimalist design
    @Peter Perry piers, schmears.
    ZDNet Gravatar
    sparkle farkle
    6th Jan
  • RE: Why Ice Cream Sandwich won't be able to save Android tablets
    @Peter Perry And this is so different from your posts criticizing iOS devices how?
    ZDNet Gravatar
    non-biased
    9th Jan
  • ZDNet Blogger

    RE: Why Ice Cream Sandwich won't be able to save Android tablets
    @nizzlebean My "lust" for Apple of course doesn't stop me from owning 5 Android devices, 3 of them tablets. Nice try though.
    ZDNet Gravatar
    jperlow
    4th Jan
  • RE: Why Ice Cream Sandwich won't be able to save Android tablets
    @jperlow Considering your 'job' I would expect nothing less. Duh. Nice try though :P
    ZDNet Gravatar
    nizzlebean
    4th Jan
  • ZDNet Gravatar
    Michael Alan Goff
    4th Jan

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