The founder of computer maker Acer has stepped into the tablet and ultrabook debate by dismissing the new form factors as fads.
Stan Shih, the founder of Acer, was quoted by Digitimes as commenting that the fads for ultrabooks and tablet PCs are short-term phenomena. Reportedly, he also urged companies in the notebook supply chain to come out with more value-added products through innovation.
Shih also reportedly stated that Apple’s success with its iPad tablet has been achieved through its outside-the-box thinking, which he said is an attitude that all notebook players should learn.
And, of course, the PC maker is also working on a seven-inch tablet PC, after it revealed plans in January this year to introduce two or three tablet computers during 2011. It has also drastically scaled back its own tablet sales predictions.
It is not unknown for Shih to make controversial comments. Back in January 2010 for example he predicted that American PC vendors would be dead in 20 years, due to their alleged inability to produce inexpensive PCs, much to the irritation, no doubt, of Dell and Hewlett-Packard.
Acer was forced to deny at that time that its tablet move would allow it to eventually phase out netbooks altogether. Acer of course already attempted to enter the tablet market, but was forced to discontinue an earlier 12-inch device in July 2010 after it sold less than 300 units in a month.
Gartner has already warned that the iPad and tablets will hurt PC sales. IDC recently found that PC shipments in Western Europe fell by 20.9 percent in the second quarter of 2011 because of the growth of interest in tablets.
Meanwhile analyst house Forrester has warned in a new report that Apple’s tablet rivals stand the most chance of success in Europe, and that they have to cut their prices if they hope to take on the Apple juggernaut.
Senior analyst at Forrester, Sarah Rotman Epps, said that the Apple iPad will maintain its lead in Europe despite the growing numbers of tablet rivals. But she warned Apple only has 52 Apple stores in Europe, and 30 of them are in the UK, so Apple would be more vulnerable to competition there.
“But no competitor has met Apple’s challenge,” she wrote. “Despite Apple’s potential vulnerability, we estimate that Apple still has 70 percent market share for tablet sell-through to consumers in Europe. iPad competitors’ prices are too high, and no competitor has matched Apple on content or channel strategy,” she added.
San Francisco jury finds Nima Momeni guilty of second-degree murder of Cash App founder Bob…
US Supreme Court says it will hear appeal of TikTok and parent ByteDance against ban…
Japanese start-up Space One destroys Kairos rocket for second time shortly after launch, as country…
World's biggest EV battery maker CATL aims to build 1,000 battery-swap stations next year, rising…
Facebook has 'severely restricted' news content from Palestinian outlets since October 2023 amidst bias concerns,…
Amazon faces strike actions at facilities across US days before Christmas as union members authorise…
View Comments
“But no competitor has met Apple’s challenge”
The iPad has been superseded by a true tablet OS not just iPod in widescreen. The technical challenge was defeated before iPad2 was even launched, now it's just the 'legal' challenge.
With their underspeced, under-featured, overpriced tat one has to wonder if they're not spending their ridiculous margins on lawyers rather than engineers.