Linked by Thom Holwerda on Mon 30th Jul 2012 19:38 UTC, submitted by tupp
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Member since:
2005-07-13
It's not just the hardware. It's the visuals on the devices themselves. They purposely tried to make their devices look as much as possible like the iPhone/Touch/iPad.
We know what to look for, if someone where to cover up the hardware part, to tell if it is an Apple device or something else. A lot of people can't tell though.
I've more than a couple of people tell me they had an Samsung iPad. That is their words. They were things they couldn't figure out and showed it to me. They weren't happy with the device and were complaining about it. They were shocked when I told them it wasn't an iPad.
Note: The people bought them at Best Buy. They had gone in and said they wanted an iPad. The person acted like it was an iPad when they bought it. They took them back and got their money back then went to an Apple store and bought iPads. They are happier now.
The problem I have with this argument is that Samsung tablets have Samsung written on the front! Where does Apple have it's name or logo? On the back! I would argue it is Apple that deliberately designed a device that was ambiguous. As for the people calling tablets in general iPad's that is common in our world. Many cassette players were called "Walkman's", many MP3 players were called "iPods" and many vacuum cleaners are called "Hovers" by consumers. However that is a consumer terminology issue not proof of copying.