element14 Community
element14 Community
    Register Log In
  • Site
  • Search
  • Log In Register
  • Community Hub
    Community Hub
    • What's New on element14
    • Feedback and Support
    • Benefits of Membership
    • Personal Blogs
    • Members Area
    • Achievement Levels
  • Learn
    Learn
    • Ask an Expert
    • eBooks
    • element14 presents
    • Learning Center
    • Tech Spotlight
    • STEM Academy
    • Webinars, Training and Events
    • Learning Groups
  • Technologies
    Technologies
    • 3D Printing
    • FPGA
    • Industrial Automation
    • Internet of Things
    • Power & Energy
    • Sensors
    • Technology Groups
  • Challenges & Projects
    Challenges & Projects
    • Design Challenges
    • element14 presents Projects
    • Project14
    • Arduino Projects
    • Raspberry Pi Projects
    • Project Groups
  • Products
    Products
    • Arduino
    • Avnet & Tria Boards Community
    • Dev Tools
    • Manufacturers
    • Multicomp Pro
    • Product Groups
    • Raspberry Pi
    • RoadTests & Reviews
  • About Us
  • Store
    Store
    • Visit Your Store
    • Choose another store...
      • Europe
      •  Austria (German)
      •  Belgium (Dutch, French)
      •  Bulgaria (Bulgarian)
      •  Czech Republic (Czech)
      •  Denmark (Danish)
      •  Estonia (Estonian)
      •  Finland (Finnish)
      •  France (French)
      •  Germany (German)
      •  Hungary (Hungarian)
      •  Ireland
      •  Israel
      •  Italy (Italian)
      •  Latvia (Latvian)
      •  
      •  Lithuania (Lithuanian)
      •  Netherlands (Dutch)
      •  Norway (Norwegian)
      •  Poland (Polish)
      •  Portugal (Portuguese)
      •  Romania (Romanian)
      •  Russia (Russian)
      •  Slovakia (Slovak)
      •  Slovenia (Slovenian)
      •  Spain (Spanish)
      •  Sweden (Swedish)
      •  Switzerland(German, French)
      •  Turkey (Turkish)
      •  United Kingdom
      • Asia Pacific
      •  Australia
      •  China
      •  Hong Kong
      •  India
      •  Korea (Korean)
      •  Malaysia
      •  New Zealand
      •  Philippines
      •  Singapore
      •  Taiwan
      •  Thailand (Thai)
      • Americas
      •  Brazil (Portuguese)
      •  Canada
      •  Mexico (Spanish)
      •  United States
      Can't find the country/region you're looking for? Visit our export site or find a local distributor.
  • Translate
  • Profile
  • Settings
Single-Board Computers
  • Products
  • Dev Tools
  • Single-Board Computers
  • More
  • Cancel
Single-Board Computers
Forum Lowest cost Android tablet as a component?
  • Blog
  • Forum
  • Documents
  • Files
  • Members
  • Mentions
  • Sub-Groups
  • Tags
  • More
  • Cancel
  • New
Join Single-Board Computers to participate - click to join for free!
Actions
  • Share
  • More
  • Cancel
Forum Thread Details
  • Replies 34 replies
  • Subscribers 59 subscribers
  • Views 3375 views
  • Users 0 members are here
  • android
  • olinuxino
  • a13
  • bbb
  • olimex
Related

Lowest cost Android tablet as a component?

morgaine
morgaine over 12 years ago

I just found this Scroll 4" Android tablet in CPC's latest catalogue, and since it features a Cortex-A8 with 512MB RAM, "BBB with LCD" immediately sprang to mind.  Of course it's not that, and it has a totally non-viable spec for a tablet in 2013, but the pre-VAT price of £29.95 appeals to my liking of nanoscale pricing.

 

At that price it could even be used as a component, for example bolted onto the front of a 3D printer as an UI panel.

 

Does anyone know of an even cheaper non-eBay Android tablet with at least a Cortex-A8 CPU?  (This tablet's SoC is an Allwinner A13 like on Olimex's A13-OLinuXino range of boards.)

 

 

  • Sign in to reply
  • Cancel

Top Replies

  • Former Member
    Former Member over 12 years ago +2
    Ok, now I'm waiting for shabaz next blog post where he steals the screen off that to connect to his BBB
  • morgaine
    morgaine over 12 years ago in reply to Former Member +1
    selsinork wrote: This weeks CPC mail shot arrived with another cheap tablet http://cpc.farnell.com/goclever/r70kb/tablet-7-k-b-bundle-tab-r70-kb/dp/SB05246?Ntt=sb05246 We seem to be sitting on the outskirts…
  • morgaine
    morgaine over 12 years ago in reply to Former Member

    coder27 wrote:

     

    There is a flip-side to most things, and the flip-side to branding is that buyers will pay more

    for the brand name because they assume that the seller has something to lose if the product

    turns out to not work well

    The manufacturer always has something to lose even without brand recognition if the product doesn't work well, because when that happens the product gets returned to the merchant.  If that occurs more than a few times, the merchant won't be happy sourcing from that manufacturer again, so the commercial feedback loop is present even without high profile branding.  Plus of course if word gets around that Product X works badly then not many units are going to get sold in the first place.  Today's highly connected world will see to that.

     

    To some extent, the "quality brand" meme is a myth anyway.  Products are generally good when they've been developed with good materials and with good engineering, both of which translate directly to higher cost, so the quality of a product depends on the target cost for which the product was designed.  This fundamental equation applies just as much to engineering in brand-conscious companies as in non-brand ones.  The only real difference is that big brand companies believe they can get away with a larger markup than the non-brands.

     

    Note what the above observation implies --- that for equivalent amounts of money, you get higher quality product from non-brands.

     

    There are markets in which brand matters but for different reasons --- longevity is one.  For example, if you're buying a DSLR camera system then you want to be reasonably confident that past lenses are going to fit future camera bodies over a lifespan of decades.  This kind of reason doesn't apply to most consumer electronics though.

    • Cancel
    • Vote Up 0 Vote Down
    • Sign in to reply
    • Cancel
  • morgaine
    morgaine over 12 years ago in reply to michaelkellett

    Michael Kellett wrote:

     

    I'm currently considering buying  a new oscilloscope and likely to pay >> £10k for it - the track record of the supplier is important because I don't want to end up with something that can't be maintained.

    I'd put your 10k 'scope into a similar category to a pro DSLR body + a lens or two adding up to a similar price.  The rules aren't really the same as they are for computer equipment in the low hundreds of pounds, let alone for 50-quid unbranded tablets.

     

    As I mentioned to coder27, company longevity comes into play.

    • Cancel
    • Vote Up 0 Vote Down
    • Sign in to reply
    • Cancel
  • Former Member
    Former Member over 12 years ago in reply to morgaine

    The manufacturer always has something to lose even without brand recognition if the product doesn't work well, because when that happens the product gets returned to the merchant. 

    I think when the price is low enough and the hassle of getting an RMA number

    and repackaging and shipping the product is great enough, that the return rate is low,

    regardless of the failure rate.

     

    Most users don't even take the trouble to create an account on a vendor forum to tell

    their stories (good or bad).  For example, less than 2% of E14's RPi customers are members

    of E14's RPi forum here, even though membership is highly encouraged for example

    by making various documents inaccessible without creating an account.

    • Cancel
    • Vote Up 0 Vote Down
    • Sign in to reply
    • Cancel
  • morgaine
    morgaine over 12 years ago in reply to Former Member

    coder27 wrote:

     

    I think when the price is low enough and the hassle of getting an RMA number

    and repackaging and shipping the product is great enough, that the return rate is low,

    regardless of the failure rate.

     

    Most users don't even take the trouble to create an account on a vendor forum to tell

    their stories (good or bad).

     

    I agree with that.  At the "below the radar" pricing end of the market (the exact point varies, but I believe there is such a point for everybody), it's too little to matter.  That's why we buy 30-quid  tablets and ARM boards without thinking twice about the brand.

     

    Does this mean that we suffer bad quality product?  Not at all !!  Branding has very little role to play in this sector, and at the bottom end, none at all.  In fact, it may have the reverse effect (see my line in bold italics two posts up).

    • Cancel
    • Vote Up 0 Vote Down
    • Sign in to reply
    • Cancel
  • morgaine
    morgaine over 12 years ago in reply to Former Member

    coder27 wrote:

     

    even though membership is highly encouraged for example by making various documents inaccessible without creating an account.

    Please add wink smily !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

     

    Nobody believes that, I sincerely hope.  A far more likely effect is frustration, annoyance, alienation and rejection.

     

    You don't attract customers by giving them pain and promising it'll go away.  Yes I know that's a common M.O. of mafia and drug gangs, but it seems to me that they don't make a very good role model.

    • Cancel
    • Vote Up 0 Vote Down
    • Sign in to reply
    • Cancel
  • Former Member
    Former Member over 12 years ago in reply to morgaine
    Nobody believes that, I sincerely hope.  A far more likely effect is frustration, annoyance, alienation and rejection.

     

    I think they are very serious, and I think they have statistics to support what they're doing.

    It does however make for some interesting user names, such as:

    http://www.element14.com/community/people/veritax

    http://www.element14.com/community/people/explodingdolphins

    http://www.element14.com/community/people/giveup

    http://www.element14.com/community/people/atix007

    • Cancel
    • Vote Up 0 Vote Down
    • Sign in to reply
    • Cancel
  • morgaine
    morgaine over 12 years ago in reply to Former Member

    coder27 wrote:

     

    I think they are very serious, and I think they have statistics to support what they're doing.

    Well let me put it this way.

     

    People don't like to be at the mercy of others.  They don't like single suppliers that leave them without options.  They don't like restrictive agreements that limit what they can do.  They don't like closed source software (except when they are the beneficiaries of the restriction) because they or their communities cannot improve it.  They don't like closed hardware (except when they are the  beneficiaries of the restriction) because nobody else will be able to market a cheaper or better version for them.  If they're techies, they don't like closed technology of any kind because in effect it enforces blindness upon them despite their ability to understand it if they wish.  All of these types of restriction on information (and many others) create a bias in favour of the provider and against the interests of the user.

     

    And people certainly don't like being required to do something that is personally annoying.

     

    In this Internet age, everyone talks to everyone else and posts interesting links to friends and acquaintances and colleagues.  Nothing is more annoying than giving someone a link to a great article only to have them tell you "It's hidden."  It dramatically reduces the utility of the site that holds it, and the unholy quartet of "frustration, annoyance, alienation and rejection"  ruin your day.  You cannot be expected to require your friends, acquaintances or colleagues to register with all the places where you have, yet this seems to be the poorly considered requirement of sites that hide their best content.  If it's good material, there is no better way of making your site interesting to others than making it publicly visible.

     

    In today's world, closed content is a liability to users (because they cannot use it freely), not an asset, and if it's a liability to your users then it's a liability to you.  Open source is massive, and its younger sibling open hardware is growing ever stronger.  Academia is beginning to realize the value of openness professionally too, and the closed journals that once had it all their own way are finding that more and more academics hate them.  This tide is very strong, and I think it's dragging absolutely everything else with it today, ever faster.

     

    Restrictions are never good for your users.  If "statistics show that it's good for us", then it's only because the users have been ignored in the measurement.

    • Cancel
    • Vote Up 0 Vote Down
    • Sign in to reply
    • Cancel
  • Former Member
    Former Member over 12 years ago in reply to morgaine

    Please add wink smily !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

     

    Nobody believes that, I sincerely hope.

    • Cancel
    • Vote Up 0 Vote Down
    • Sign in to reply
    • Cancel
  • morgaine
    morgaine over 12 years ago in reply to Former Member

    You sincerely hope what?  That people like to be at the mercy of others?  That restrictions are good for users?  Or that people want all those things that I mentioned to be closed?

     

    None of those, I assume, which is why there is no wink smily.  They're all quite obvious things, as it boils down to users not liking what is not to their advantage.

    • Cancel
    • Vote Up 0 Vote Down
    • Sign in to reply
    • Cancel
  • Former Member
    Former Member over 12 years ago in reply to morgaine

    sometimes people that beg for open source:

    A perfect argument for open source software. image

    turn right around when it is offered and say that rolling their own solutions would be too much trouble:

    Indeed!  But people rolling their own doesn't obviate Christy's team needing to make E14's forum good as well. image

    • Cancel
    • Vote Up 0 Vote Down
    • Sign in to reply
    • Cancel
<>
element14 Community

element14 is the first online community specifically for engineers. Connect with your peers and get expert answers to your questions.

  • Members
  • Learn
  • Technologies
  • Challenges & Projects
  • Products
  • Store
  • About Us
  • Feedback & Support
  • FAQs
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Legal and Copyright Notices
  • Sitemap
  • Cookies

An Avnet Company © 2025 Premier Farnell Limited. All Rights Reserved.

Premier Farnell Ltd, registered in England and Wales (no 00876412), registered office: Farnell House, Forge Lane, Leeds LS12 2NE.

ICP 备案号 10220084.

Follow element14

  • X
  • Facebook
  • linkedin
  • YouTube