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iPad adoption rate fastest in electronics product history

Sales show consumers are adopting the iPad faster than any other electronics device, including the iPhone and the DVD player.
Sales show consumers are adopting the iPad faster than any other electronics device, including the iPhone and the DVD player.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Consumers are adopting the iPad faster than any other electronics device, an analyst says
  • Sales rates surpass Apple's iPhone and the near-ubiquitous DVD player
  • The iPad's current sales rate is approximately 4.5 million units per quarter, the analyst says
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(ArsTechnica) -- Some people still doubt the iPad's chances for success, but current sales rates suggest that the device could rank among top consumer electronics categories within a year.

As noted by Bernstein Research analyst Colin McGranahan, consumers are adopting the iPad faster than any other consumer electronics device, including the iPhone and the near-ubiquitous DVD player.

"The iPad did not seem destined to be a runaway product success straight out of the box," said McGranahan in a recent note to investors, acknowledging the many criticisms about the iPad's lack of certain features at launch.

"By any account, the iPad is a runaway success of unprecedented proportion."

The iPad's current sales rate is approximately 4.5 million units per quarter, according to Bernstein. That tops the 1 million per quarter that the original iPhone sold at launch, and the 350,000 per quarter when DVD players first launched.

If the current rate persists, the iPad could become a $9 billion per year business, blowing right past game consoles and cell phones to become the fourth largest consumer electronics category. That would put the iPad right behind TVs, smartphones and laptops.

With numbers like these behind it, it's no wonder that companies like Samsung and Research in Motion are rushing to score a piece of the touchscreen tablet market.

With yet more competing products in the pipeline, Apple will have to work hard to translate its first-mover advantage into consistently stellar sales as it has done with the iPod and the iPhone.

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