With new tablets hitting the market what seems like every week, Google's Nexus 7 device is still holding strong, selling about 1 million units a month, according to Asus, which produces the device.
Asus CFO David Chang told The Wall Street Journal that the 7-inch tablet has grown from summer shipments of about 500,000 units per month, to 600,000-700,000 before approaching 1 million in October.
Analysts had estimated that Google would sell between 800,000 and 1 million Nexus 7 tablets during the third quarter, the Journal said.
The report comes shortly after Google unveiled a new Nexus lineup, including the 10-inch Nexus 10 and a Nexus 7 with expanded storage capacity and Android 4.2, as well as the Nexus 4 smartphone.
The new LG phone boasts a 4.7-inch, 1,280-by-768 display, plus a 360-degree photo option, available via T-Mobile for $199. Samsung's larger Nexus 10 carries a 10-inch, 2,560-by-1,600 display, and a price tag of $399 for the 16GB or $499 for the 32GB.
Additionally, the Nexus 7 got a storage boost, bumping the 8GB version out of the running, instead selling the 16GB for $199, and a new 32GB for $249. Check PCMag's review of the original Nexus 7.
Still, nothing compares to the 14 million iPads Apple sold in its third quarter — a drop from the 17 million it sold in the previous quarter. Apple also unwrapped its iPad mini and fourth-generation iPad last week, and is already selling out of early shipments of both. For more, see PCMag's hands on with the iPad mini, as well as the iPad 4.
Asus CFO David Chang told The Wall Street Journal that the 7-inch tablet has grown from summer shipments of about 500,000 units per month, to 600,000-700,000 before approaching 1 million in October.
Analysts had estimated that Google would sell between 800,000 and 1 million Nexus 7 tablets during the third quarter, the Journal said.
The report comes shortly after Google unveiled a new Nexus lineup, including the 10-inch Nexus 10 and a Nexus 7 with expanded storage capacity and Android 4.2, as well as the Nexus 4 smartphone.
The new LG phone boasts a 4.7-inch, 1,280-by-768 display, plus a 360-degree photo option, available via T-Mobile for $199. Samsung's larger Nexus 10 carries a 10-inch, 2,560-by-1,600 display, and a price tag of $399 for the 16GB or $499 for the 32GB.
Additionally, the Nexus 7 got a storage boost, bumping the 8GB version out of the running, instead selling the 16GB for $199, and a new 32GB for $249. Check PCMag's review of the original Nexus 7.
Still, nothing compares to the 14 million iPads Apple sold in its third quarter — a drop from the 17 million it sold in the previous quarter. Apple also unwrapped its iPad mini and fourth-generation iPad last week, and is already selling out of early shipments of both. For more, see PCMag's hands on with the iPad mini, as well as the iPad 4.
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