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BII REPORT: Why Phablets Aren't Just A Fad

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bii_androidscreenshareAt the time the iPhone was introduced, its 3.5-inch screen was considered huge. When Sprint introduced the first 4G phone, the HTC EVO 4G, in mid-2010, many thought the 4.3-inch display would be too large, but the phone was a hitSamsung upped the ante with the 4.5-inch Infuse smartphone in January 2011.

On the tablet side, screens were getting smaller, shrinking the distance between phone and tablet display sizes. There were many 7-inch tablets introduced, including the original Galaxy Tab, and less expensive successors, including the Kindle Fire, Nook Color, and Google Nexus 7.

A new notion was emerging about the convergence of smartphones and tablets. But the term "phablet" — something between a phone and a tablet — didn't come to be widely used until Samsung broke the 5-inch barrier with the first Galaxy Note. Samsung itself plays on the ambiguity in its current campaign for the Galaxy Note II with the tagline “Phone? Tablet? Best of Both.”

In a new report from BI Intelligence, we investigate whether phablets are here to stay, dig into how smaller tablets and larger smartphones are changing the way consumers use their devices, analyze existing phablet device sales and future sales projections, look at various phablet holdouts, detail the potential downside to phablets, and examine other ways to "go big" other than the phablet approach.

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Here's a brief overview of what we can expect to see in the near future for phablets:

In full, BI Intelligence's report on Phablets: 

To access BI Intelligence's full report Phablets Aren't Just A Fad, sign up for a free trial subscription here.

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