The tablet competition for the Apple iPad is set to increase, after the man in charge of PC maker Acer revealed that its portfolio of Android and Windows-based tablets will launch next month.
Acer ‘s CEO, Gianfranco Lanci, told Dow Jones Newswire that the company is planning to introduce a family of tablet computers in November, some of which will run Microsoft’s Windows platform and some of which will run on Google’s open-source Android mobile operating system.
The tablets will sell for between $299 (£188) and $699 (£440) and will be unveiled during a press conference 23 November.
Acer Chairman J.T. Wang told the news service the company will open its online portal for tablet applications, and Wang remained confident of a strong increase of sales for non-tablet devices. “We won’t imitate Google or Apple. We are in good position to penetrate into other customer electronics markets including smartphones and tablet PCs,” Wang told Dow Jones.
Lanci was reported confirming the company was also opening a “major operations centre” in China, just days after Apple announced the launch of its online store for the Chinese market; Apple’s iPad is currently available to Chinese buyers. “The new major operation centre will have manufacturing, logistics and sales operations,” Lanci said.
Lanci was quoted by Computerworld as forecasting a tablet market nearing between 40 million and 50 million devices globally by 2011, downplaying the risk of a netbook market cannibalisation and the price of PC components. “The idea that the tablet will cannibalise the netbook, we don’t see it, except in the US,” he said, adding he thinks Acer could eventually claim up to 20 percent of the tablet market. “You’re probably not going to see the price going down, you’re likely to see the specs going up,” he said, referring to the consumer PC market.
Acer’s tablet would position the company in direct competition with Apple, Hewlett-Packard, Samsung, BlackBerry maker Research In Motion, Panasonic and Microsoft, to name a few.
IT research firm Gartner recently highlighted the top 10 technologies and trends that will be strategic for most organisations in 2011; factors in the decision included a significant impact include a high potential for disruption to IT or the business, the need for a major dollar investment or the risk of being late to adopt. Gartner estimated that by the end of 2010, 1.2 billion people would carry handsets capable of rich, mobile commerce, including tablets, providing “an ideal environment” for the convergence of mobility and the web.
In the second quarter, Acer slipped one spot to become the world’s third largest PC maker after Hewlett-Packard and Dell, according to a September report from iSuppli. Acer experienced a 6.2 percent shipment decline in the second quarter, with its shipments falling to 10.2 million units, down from 10.9 million in the first quarter.
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