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DaddyHalbucks 07-08-2011 11:29 AM

TabletPorn,com --domain for sale
 
We have a great domain for sale, check it out:

TabletPorn,com

Here is some information about the booming tablet market:

Gartner: Nearly 20 million tablets to be sold in 2010
http://www.networkworld.com/news/201...lets-ipad.html

IDC: 18 million tablets, 12 million e-readers shipped in 2010
http://www.engadget.com/2011/03/10/i...ipped-in-2010/

Corning Analyst: 180 Million Tablets Sold, 2014
http://www.slashgear.com/corning-ana...2014-04131081/

By the end of the decade, there will probably be a billion tablets sold; that's my guess.

If any porn company is serious about getting their share of this fast growing platform, which promises to be HUGE --let's talk.

DaddyHalbucks 07-08-2011 12:25 PM

Super sweet domain!

DaddyHalbucks 07-08-2011 01:30 PM

How many years do you guys think it will take to get to the 1 billion tablets sold mark?

I am going to guess it will happen by 2017.

DaddyHalbucks 07-08-2011 08:03 PM

To the top!

DaddyHalbucks 07-10-2011 10:47 AM

I had one decent offer, but the domain is still available.

:)

porn-mobile 07-10-2011 02:03 PM

Any traffic?

DaddyHalbucks 07-10-2011 04:22 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by porn-mobile (Post 18272680)
Any traffic?

Right now:
probably a little, I don't track it.

In a few years, when the 1 billionth tablet gets shipped to consumers:
quite a bit, I imagine.

:winkwink:

quickhosting 07-10-2011 10:49 PM

sent you an email

DaddyHalbucks 07-11-2011 08:45 AM

Any serious offers?

DaddyHalbucks 07-12-2011 08:57 AM

Which porn companies intend to dominate the tablet marketspace in the next few years?

DaddyHalbucks 07-16-2011 04:58 PM

PC sales continue slump amid iPad takeover

By David Goldman @CNNMoneyTech July 13, 2011: 5:58 PM ET

NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- Shipments of personal computers in the United
States tumbled in the second quarter as manufacturers, retailers and
consumers shift their focus to tablets.

U.S. PC shipments fell 5.6%, compared to the same three-month period a
year ago, according Gartner. Worldwide PC shipments grew just 2.3%,
well below the tech consultancy's modest 6.7% growth forecast.

"Given the hype around media tablets such as the iPad, retailers were
very conservative in placing orders for PCs," said Mikako Kitagawa,
principal analyst at Gartner. "Instead, they wanted to secure space
for media tablets."

The consumer PC market had been growing strongly since 2007, driven
primarily by the rise of low-priced netbooks. Now, that segment of the
market is being replaced by the iPad and, to a much lesser degree,
some Google (GOOG, Fortune 500) Android, Research In Motion (RIMM)
BlackBerry and Microsoft Windows-based tablets.

Apple (AAPL, Fortune 500) has sold nearly 20 million iPads in their
first year on store shelves. Meanwhile, U.S. PC manufacturers have
been underselling their year-ago results by about a million devices.

Acer, the world's fourth-largest PC manufacturer, was the biggest
loser. The Gateway owner shipped 20.4% fewer computers last quarter
than it did a year ago.

By contrast, Lenovo's global shipments grew 22.5%.

In the U.S., No. 1 PC seller Hewlett-Packard's (HPQ, Fortune 500)
shipments fell 1.2% and No. 2 Dell (DELL, Fortune 500) tumbled 9.8%.
HP's outlook sours on slumping PC sales

It wasn't all grim news. Apple, the country's third-largest PC seller,
grew its shipments by 8.5%, putting to rest fears that iPad sales
would cannibalize its Macintosh line. Apple frequently touts is
so-called "halo effect," in which satisfied buyers of less expensive
Apple items like iPods, iPhones and iPads buy the more expensive Macs
for their next PC purchases.

Toshiba's U.S. shipments rose 3.3%, while all others fell 6.9%.

PC growth is mostly coming from emerging markets, particularly in the
Asia-Pacific and Latin American regions, while PC sales in more mature
markets like North America and Europe are sinking in favor of tablets.

But one source of growth in the mature markets the corporate world.
Many companies are in the midst of a so-called "hardware refreshment
cycle," in which they buy a slew of new PCs to replace their aging
ones. The most recent refresh has been exacerbated by corporations
stretching the life of their PCs in recent years due to the
combination of the Great Recession and Microsoft's (MSFT, Fortune 500)
unpopular Windows Vista operating system.

Overall, however, the PC market is "shifting to modest, but steady
growth," Kitagawa said.

As a result of the tablet boom, Gartner said it expects PC shipments
in the U.S. and other mature markets to grow less than 10% annually,
on average, between 2011 and 2015 thanks to "a general loss in
consumer enthusiasm for mobile PCs."

That represents a sizeable shift in Gartner's earlier expectations,
which were colored by the belief that consumers would continue buying
laptops as their second and third PCs. Gartner reduced its 2011 PC
shipment growth forecast a whopping five percentage points, ratcheting
it down from 15.9% to 10.5%.

http://money.cnn.com/2011/07/13/tech...les/index.htm?

DaddyHalbucks 07-16-2011 04:59 PM

Amazon to Battle Apple iPad With Tablet

By STU WOO And YUKARI IWATANI KANE

JULY 14, 2011

Amazon.com Inc. has battled Apple Inc. over digital books, digital
music and mobile applications. Now the two companies are taking their
clash to another front: the tablet market.

Amazon plans to release a tablet computer by October, people familiar
with the matter said, intensifying its rivalry with Apple's iPad.

Amazon will launch a tablet by October, intensifying the rivalry with
Apple and its iPad. WSJ reporter Stu Woo gives Lauren Rudser the
details we know so far.

While Amazon has long offered digital content on its website, it has
lacked much of the hardware to go with it. Now the Seattle company
hopes customers will use its tablet to buy and rent that content, said
people familiar with its thinking.

An Amazon spokesman didn't respond to requests for comment.

Amazon's looming entry into the tablet market, which Chief Executive
Jeff Bezos has hinted at in his appearances this year, is the latest
example of how technology companies, once focused on a particular
segment of the industry, are increasingly jostling one another on
multiple fronts.

That trend is evident in the enterprise-technology arena, where
onetime partners such as Hewlett-Packard Co. and Oracle Corp. became
enemies in markets including server computers, and it is now becoming
evident in consumer technology.

In recent years, Apple, Amazon and Google Inc. have found themselves
competing in areas such as the mobile software market and digital
content. The overlap stems from a race to tap into the young and
growing field of selling digital goods, such as video, music and
books, which are potentially vast markets as more consumers turn to
downloads.

Apple and Amazon have already had some bitter clashes. In March, Apple
sued Amazon alleging the online retailer had violated the trademark on
the name "App Store." Apple Chief Executive Steve Jobs also has poked
fun at Amazon's Kindle electronic-book reader, saying that few people
read and that general-purpose devices like the iPad are superior to
single-purpose ones.

"Amazon and Apple are frenemies"—both friends and enemies—said Sarah
Rotman Epps, a Forrester Research analyst. They "rely on each other as
partners"—Amazon, for example, sells digital books via its Kindle app
in Apple's iTunes Store—but "at the same time, they aggressively
compete for customers' attention and dollars," she said.

Amazon faces a tough road against Apple in the tablet market. Since
introducing the iPad last year, Apple had sold 19.5 million of the
devices as of the end of March. It is far and away the leader in the
tablet market.
The Digital Solution

The iPad has been bolstered by its connection to Apple's App Store,
which sells videogames and other software, and Apple's iTunes store,
where people can easily download music, videos and books.

Apple officials didn't respond to a request for comment.

Amazon's tablet will have a roughly nine-inch screen and will run on
Google's Android platform, said people familiar with the device.
Unlike the iPad, it won't have a camera, one of these people said.
While the pricing and distribution of the device is unclear, the
online retailer won't design the initial tablet itself. It also is
outsourcing production to an Asian manufacturer, the people said.

One of the people said the company is working on another model, of its
own design, that could be released next year.

The introduction of a tablet poses a conundrum for Amazon on how to
keep from cannibalizing sales of its popular Kindle. Amazon has long
said the Kindle is its best-selling device, though it has declined to
disclose sales.

A person familiar with Amazon's thinking said it still figuring out
how to market the tablet computer. One issue is whether customers will
want to buy both the tablet and Kindle, which is viewed as a
dedicated-reading device for bookworms.

But Amazon will be facing competitors other than Apple. Sony Corp. on
Wednesday unveiled prototypes of a tablet and a wallet-shaped
dual-screen portable device that will offer movies, apps, music, books
and PlayStation games. Sony said the devices would be available later
this year.

Amazon plans to introduce two updated versions of its black-and-white
Kindle in this year's third quarter, people familiar with the matter
said. One of the new Kindles will have a touch screen, which current
models don't have.

Amazon is better-positioned than other companies to go up against
Apple, said Ms. Epps, the Forrester analyst. Part of the reason is
because Amazon already has a digital-content store with a significant
selection and following. Amazon has heavily promoted its digital
offerings this year. It launched a streaming video service in
February. And in May, it undercut Apple's iTunes store by selling an
album by pop singer Lady Gaga for 99 cents.

Amazon is also in a position to offer a cheaper alternative to the
iPad, said Ms. Epps. It could sell the tablet for a loss while hoping
to make money on sales of movies, music and books.

Customers are "looking for a cheaper alternative, and they're looking
for a compelling experience, in terms of both content and shopping,"
which Amazon can offer, Ms. Epps said.

Nonetheless, she noted that unlike Apple, which has its own retail
stores, Amazon lacks a natural brick-and-mortar outlet to sell its
products. In addition, Amazon's product may be less refined than the
iPad, which is in its second generation.

"I don't know whether Amazon will be able to compete with Apple
head-to-head on hardware sophistication," she said.

—Amir Efrati contributed to this article.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000...058153874.html

DaddyHalbucks 07-17-2011 10:27 AM

This is a great opportunity. You are almost guaranteed market share of this blossoming platform.

net_hed 07-19-2011 11:23 AM

100 from me.

DaddyHalbucks 07-20-2011 10:21 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by net_hed (Post 18292349)
100 from me.

LOL. Not a chance.

Domain is probably sold to someone else for alot more money. Consider it off the market, at least for now.

DaddyHalbucks 07-22-2011 12:33 PM

Domain is now SOLD.

U snooze, U lose.

:)

porn-mobile 07-22-2011 08:38 PM

Care to help broker the domain pornipad.com ?

DaddyHalbucks 07-22-2011 11:45 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by porn-mobile (Post 18301518)
Care to help broker the domain pornipad.com ?

1. I don't broker, I manage my own portfolio.

2. I might make an exception once in a while for an extraordinary domain, but this is not such a case.

3. The domain is a potential liability as it contains a famous, registered, and distinctive trademark.


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