Apple Inc. is set to release their new low-cost iPad and education software next week which is set to reignite sales for the tech giant and win back students and teachers who have opted for Google and Microsoft technology due to Apple’s notoriously high product price-point.
Steve Jobs made education a strong focus for the company in it’s infancy, specifically, on primary and secondary schooling. However, as the company quickly rose to fame, this called for mass-market producing and an extremely high product demand.
This opened a window for major competitors like Google and Microsoft Corp to develop more inexpensive laptop and tablet options for students around the globe, which were quickly picked up on with such a high demand for technology in the learning space.
Last year, the global educational technology market generated $17.7 billion in revenue, according to research firm Frost & Sullivan.
Apple accounted for 17 percent of mobile computing shipments to American students in kindergarten through to high school, according to data from the third quarter published by Futuresource Consulting. Devices running Google’s operating systems on Chromebooks or Android tablets held 60 percent of the market, and Windows PCs had 22 percent. While Macs and iPads make up less than 20 percent of Apple’s sales combined, students and teachers are a key market to drive future purchases.
According to 9to5Mac, analyst Ming-Chi Kuo expects that Apple will also release a 13-inch MacBook Air “with a lower price tag,” later this year, and that the lower price could help boost Apple’s laptop sales.
Though Kuo does not mention the possibility, if Apple is planning to add Apple Pencil support to the low-cost iPad, some kind of keyboard could also be included. With Apple Pencil support and an included keyboard accessory, iPads would be a far more appealing option for schools.