Showing posts with label tablet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tablet. Show all posts

Thursday, January 27, 2011

Asia computer market has room for both tablets and laptops

TAIPEI - Tablet computers such as Apple's iPad and Samsung's Galaxy have had a fanfare of publicity, but they are unlikely to kill off their older cousin the laptop anytime soon, say Asian analysts and vendors.

Sales of smaller-screen and cheaper netbook laptops may appear to be sloping off in a mature market like the United States, but analysts in Asia believe this is not the end of the road for the laptop itself.

"The tablet is a secondary device, meant for people who already have a PC and want a device for portable usage," said Tracy Tsai, a Taipei-based analyst with technology research company Gartner.

"Using the tablet as your only device is rare, as you still need something with a keyboard to type in things, and storage."

Apple's iPad has replaced half of US electronics chain store Best Buy's cheaper netbook sales, the retailer estimated last month, and the pressure can only increase as a stream of gadget makers bring out their own tablets.

Best Buy has begun showcasing e-readers, tablets and mobile devices in its most prominent store displays as Christmas approaches.

"People are willing to disproportionately spend for these devices because they are becoming so important to their lives," Best Buy Chief Executive Brian Dunn told the Wall Street Journal.

In Taiwan, a Nielsen Global Consumer survey in March found that 36 percent of people either had a tablet computer already or planned to buy one.

"iPads have faster Internet connections than laptops," said a vendor in downtown Taipei surnamed Wen. "It's lighter and easy to carry around so many people are buying it now."

But Taipei is not typical of Asia's billions of consumers, however, and there will initially be relatively limited markets for the iPad and competing tablets made by several manufacturers including Samsung and Dell.

"In emerging markets users in places like Shanghai or Beijing have a purchasing power similar to the average person in Singapore and Taipei, but it’s still limited to first-tier cities," said Gartner's Tsai.

"Most emerging markets are price-sensitive, and in Indonesia for example a price difference of 20 or 30 dollars is important."

Japan is definitely alert to the advantages of moderately-sized tablet computers in cramped spaces, but observers are careful not to pronounce the laptop dead, or even ailing, just yet.

"A tablet computer is an item you can literally walk around with in one hand," said Takumi Sado, a senior analyst at Daiwa Securities Capital Markets.

"You can carry a notebook computer around, too, but you still need to find a place to sit down and work on it.

"But if you want to type up something, a notebook computer still works better... At this point, I can only say that tablet PCs are for different needs, such as online search, from those of laptop computers."

Japanese electronics giant NEC, the dominant player in the domestic computer market, sold 2.73 million PCs last year, 60 percent of which were laptops, a company spokesman said.

"Basically in Japan, a notebook computer has become an essential item in a regular household. We are considering a tablet PC as an item somewhere between a notebook and a mobile phone," he said.

"We think the tablet computers will create a whole new market on top of notebook PCs. We don't think the tablet would diminish the market of laptop computers."

Toshiba, another Japanese electronics giant, has marketed a mobile PC model without a keyboard, called the libretto, which opens up like a book with two slate displays on both sides.

The company said it has also developed a slate-type tablet computer called Folio 100, planning to release it next year only in Europe, Africa, Middle East and part of Asia including Southeast Asian nations, but not in Japan.

"The company believes tablet computers are a new category of products," a Toshiba spokeswoman said.

New technologies can be disruptive, even destructive. But they can also be the opposite, giving new momentum to existing, more mature technologies.

"Tablet PCs and laptops have different functions and are expected to create a different segment of consumers and will complement each other," said James Song, a Seoul-based analyst for Daewoo Securities.

"So tablets will enhance the overall usage of mobile PCs."

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Wednesday, January 5, 2011

LG Elec says Android 2.2-based tablet plan dropped

SEOUL - LG Electronics Inc said on Monday that it had scrapped a plan to launch a tablet computer based on Google Inc's Android 2.2 operation system known as "Froyo", a decision that may delay the rollout of its first tablet PC slated for next quarter.

The decision could mark another setback for the South Korean company, which is seeking to bolster its loss-making handset division with attractive new devices, as its tablet may come too late to a suddenly congested market led by Apple Inc's successful iPad.

"We plan to introduce a tablet that runs on the most reliable Android version ... We are in talks with Google to decide on the most suitable version for our tablet and that is not Froyo 2.2," said an LG official.

The official declined to be named, saying LG had yet to decide on the timing for its tablet launch.

BlackBerry maker Research In Motion Ltd unveiled its PlayBook tablet last week in the fast-growing market that is becoming more crowded with the likes of Samsung Electronics Co Ltd and Dell Inc.

LG, the world's No.3 mobile phone maker but a laggard in the booming smartphone market, introduced the Optimus One smartphone in Korea this week before launching global sales through about 120 carriers with a sales target of 10 million units.

Its smartphones have yet to reach the 1 million unit sales mark and LG is betting on strong demand for Android-based smartphones to help put it firmly back on the recovery path.

The company ousted its chief executive last month, replacing him with a founding family member, and named new heads for its mobile phone and TV division last week in a sweeping reshuffle to shore up core operation.

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Saturday, October 30, 2010

Touchscreen chipmakers tap tablet boom

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The chipmakers behind the touchpads that are killing off the laptop mouse and the keys on a mobile phone are battling for supremacy in the latest blockbuster gadget -- the tablet PC.

Boosted by Apple's iPad, sales of tablet, or slate, touchscreen units will jump to more than 136 million in 2014 from just 15.4 million this year, says market research firm iSuppli.

Tablet PCs are set to capture three-quarters of the PC touch market this year, from below 4 percent in 2009, crushing opposition from notebooks, netbooks and monitors.

"The tablet market is going to be one of the largest for touch screen controllers," said Jennifer Colegrove, director at Display Search, which monitors trends in the display sector.

Colegrove expects the tablet PC market to generate $90 million in revenue for touchscreen chipmakers this year, and that could double in 2011.

And those numbers are expected to keep growing -- to as high as $500 million by 2012, forecasts Rodman & Renshaw analyst Ashok Kumar, dwarfing unit-for-unit the handset touchscreen market.

What began as a niche market 15 years ago -- when Silicon Valley-based Synaptics put a credit card-sized touchpad on the Apple Mac Book -- has exploded into a global touchpad market forecast to be worth $9 billion within a couple of years across PCs, handsets and other gadgets such as e-readers.

While smartphones have driven profits at Synaptics and peers Cypress Semiconductor Corp and Atmel Corp, these firms are now gearing up for the latest "killer device" -- the tablet computer, a device between a smartphone and a laptop.

Spurred by the success of the fully touch-based iPad, tech brands such as Samsung Electronics, Research in Motion, Motorola, Lenovo Group Ltd and others are expected to launch tablet-like devices soon, establishing a strong market for touchscreen chipmakers.

"The market growth has been explosive," said Rodman's Kumar. "The product category is here to stay and all the OEMs (original equipment makers) are throwing their hands in the rain."

Other companies getting into the touchscreen controller market include Broadcom Corp, Texas Instruments Inc, Chinese Pixcir Microelectronics and Taiwan-based Elan Microelectronics Corp.

These firms make chips that allow users to control phones, digital music players or PCs by touch -- from a simple tap to more complex gestures that enable zooming, pinching and rotating.

Typically, the dollar content for a touch chip on a tablet device is 3-5 times the average selling price of a mobile phone touch chip.

"There could be anywhere between $10-$15 worth of content apiece (in tablets) to go after for Cypress, Atmel and Synaptics," said Needham & Co analyst Rajvindra Gill.

Catching fast

While Synaptics leads the market in touchscreen chips, Cypress and Atmel are fast grabbing the attention of original equipment makers, scoring several design wins lately.

Among other tech giants reckoned to be preparing tablet-like devices are Toshiba Corp, Hewlett-Packard Co, HTC Corp and Cisco Systems Inc.

Cypress and Atmel have already snapped up some design wins for products expected to ship this year, giving them first-mover advantage as Synaptics lagged in unveiling its latest touch solution.

"Cypress is seeing design wins for (non-iPad) tablets that will be shipping in the third quarter," said Capstone Investments analyst Jeffrey Schreiner.

At least two analysts said BlackBerry maker RIM's upcoming tablet -- likely dubbed the BlackPad and expected to hit the market in November -- would use touch chips from Cypress.

Dell's Streak, unveiled last month, and Samsung's Galaxy Tab, due out this month, use Atmel chips, said Gleacher & Co analyst Ian Ing.

However, the tech brands are known to use more than a single supplier for many components, and Jefferies analyst Blayne Curtis noted Pixcir designs are also in Dell's Streak.

Apple doesn't reveal its part suppliers, but teardown firms say the iPad uses chips from Atmel, Broadcom and Texas Instruments.

As touch chipmakers slug it out for a share of the tablet PC pie, their sales pitch will focus on pricing, efficient power usage and the precision of the touch controller for the slate's larger screens.

"In terms of low-power, Atmel has a great product and, in terms of pricing, both Cypress and Atmel are better positioned," Curtis said.

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Monday, September 13, 2010

South Korean firms prepare to fight Apple onslaught

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The 4-inch Samsung Galaxy S smartphone (left) and the 7-inch Samsung Galaxy Tab tablet PC (right)
Photo: www.engadget.com

South Korean firms said Thursday they would soon release tablet PCs to contend with the imminent arrival of Apple's iPad after the roaring success of the American firm's smartphones.

Top mobile phone operator SK Telecom said it would launch the Galaxy Tab, a seven-inch touchscreen tablet from Samsung Electronics that is smaller than the 9.7-inch iPad.

"We are aiming for a September release. We are also considering diverse tablet PCs at the moment," SK spokesman Kim Dae-Woong told AFP, adding that pricing and the exact release date had still to be decided.

Global computer and handset makers have scurried to respond to the success of Apple's tablet PCs, released in April. The US company sold more than three million iPads within less than three months of the product's release.

Apple's local distributor, KT Corp, said it had been in talks with the US company to offer the iPad in South Korea. Spokesman Lee In-Won said the release could be around early September.

The Galaxy Tab will be unveiled on September 2 at a trade show in Germany. Its local rival, LG Electronics, has promised to release an Android-based tablet PC before December.

Tablet PCs feature bigger screens than smartphones and have no keyboards, instead employing touchscreens or stylus pens as input devices.

Apple distributor KT plans to introduce a low-end tablet PC before bringing the iPad into the tech-savvy country.

KT said it had sold one million iPhones, including about 880,000 of the iPhone 3 and 3GS, since their debut nine months earlier.

It has also received 212,000 pre-orders for the iPhone 4, reflecting its "through-the-roof popularity", spokesman Jin Byung-Kwon said.

South Korea's mobile phone market is one of the world's most vibrant, with 45 million users in a population of 49 million. But smartphones have a relatively small share, implying huge growth potential. Since its launch in June, Samsung has sold more than 900,000 Galaxy S smartphones.

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