“One of the first things they teach you in Statistics 101 is that the size of your sample doesn’t matter as much as how representative it is,” Philip Elmer-DeWitt reports for Fortune.
“In that regard, it’s probably a good thing that Baird’s William Power acknowledges high up in the note he issued to clients Monday that the online survey of 488 potential customers Baird Equity Research fielded last week ‘catered to a younger, tech-savvier group on average,'” P.E.D. reports. “Still, if taken with the requisite grain of salt, the results are chock-full of savory factoids that are, as Power puts it, ‘encouraging’ for Apple.”
P.E.D. reports, “24% of Americans surveyed plan to buy the new iPad… [and] 29% of international respondents hoped to buy it within 3 months… 15% of U.S. respondents plan to purchase the discounted iPad 2.”
More fun facts in the full article here.
MacDailyNews Take: Bloodbath.
[Thanks to MacDailyNews Reader “Ellis D” for the heads up.]
The big question is: of the people NOT buying an iPad, are they planning to buy anything else? If they’re smart, they won’t…
I think the bigger datapoint is that 47% plan to buy some form of iPad.
I ran the batteries down on my calculator trying to figure out your math.
Let’s make it simple. 51% of internationals will buy a new iPad or iPad 2. 39% of US respondents will buy a new iPad or iPad2. 2/3rds of sales are international, so that works out to 47% plan to buy “some form” of iPad.
By the time Windows 8 slates/tablets hit the market, everyone with any sence at all will already have an iPad.
“…any sence…” s/b “…any cents…”