Sat Oct 18, 2008 6:07PM EDT
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Read the headline and you might wonder what all the fuss about "recession" is all about: Per Gartner's latest research, computer sales worldwide climbed a whopping 15 percent on a unit basis in Q3 2008 vs. the same period in 2007, topping 80.6 million units shipped.
Before you start celebrating that the recession's been averted, though, best to consider where virtually all the growth in the market came from: Netbooks (or mini-notebooks), the low-cost laptops that normally hit retail at $500 or less.
These machines have clearly been cannibalizing low-end PC sales, so watch for hefty price competition this holiday season as vendors try to encourage netbook buyers to spend a few hundred bucks extra on more powerful machines.
Still #1 in worldwide sales is HP, with Dell slipping further behind. Acer is #3 worldwide. The figures are shuffled in the U.S.: Dell is #1 here, with HP #2 and Apple taking the #3 slot based on a near 30 percent annualized growth in computer sales since 2007. Can the company keep it up in a sagging economic climate? (Gartner thinks so and says to expect continued growth from Apple in the education and home markets.)
The bigger question is what will happen with the netbook market. While these have been all the rage for a year now, the novelty is bound to wear off at some point as buyers realize they simply aren't cut out for serious work. Last holiday season was huge for netbooks, but again, owing to the economy, I wonder how many will be bought this year. Will consumers keep snapping them up as cheaper, stopgap alternatives to more powerful computers, or will buyers choose instead to save their money and put it towards a future purchase?
What are your plans when it comes to laptop buying this year?
Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.
Laptop don't need it I have no use for it, As far computer sales goes look for sales to take a sharp down ward turn in the next month with everything else. it going to be a bad year for santa clause this year and of course retail too.
I'd want something that is a bit future-proof. Then again, I might want to build it myself if it were a desktop.
I do have the 64 bit Vista Home Premium version, so the RAM is not wasted.
Netbooks are fine for sending e-mails and surfing the web, but there are not a lot of other things you can use them for. If I simply wanted something portable and compact for e-mail and surfing the web, I would get a BlackBerry.
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1 Posted by locomotive611 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 6:55PM EDT Report Abuse
I purchased a new HP notebook, not netbook, in August. I needed Vista for a college class, and the price was right ($999 after rebate). I got Intel Core 2 Duo processor, 4 GB RAM, and 320 GB hard drive. PC has Bluetooth, webcam, and a/g/b/n Wi-Fi. It's cheaper than the Toshiba I bought 3 years ago that only had 512 MB RAM and 60 GB hard drive that needed replacing because I couldn't run Vista on it.