Tablets, smartphones to eclipse PCs in 2011: Deloitte
Lyon, France (AFP) Feb 10, 2011 Sales of tablets and smartphones will outnumber personal computers this year as consumers begin using a wider variety of devices to access the Internet, according to a study by the Deloitte consulting firm. "Deloitte predicts that in 2011 more than 50 percent of computing devices sold globally will not be PCs," Deloitte said in its latest Technology, Media & Telecommunications Predictions report. It said sales of smartphones and tablet computers would come to 425 million, well above sales of 390 million PCs. Tablets are expected to rack up 50 million sales and smartphones 375 million. Deloitte said the PC era is far from over as they will remain the workhorse computing platform. "However, when looking at the future of computing devices, 2011 may well mark the tipping point as we move from a world of mostly standardised PC-like devices, containing standardised chips and software, to a far more heterogeneous environment." It said it it expects at least two distinct chip architectures to emerge and at least five different operating systems with more than five percent market share. Deloitte said it also expects 2011 to be a breakthrough year for tablets in the workplace, with more than 25 percent of sales in 2011 going to companies. Software to allow tablets to become integrated to secure business networks has recently become available.
earlier related report Livestand will launch by July with content from Yahoo! websites along with an undisclosed array of partners, chief product officer Blake Irving said on Thursday. "The magazine knows what type of story you are reading; it privately knows where you are and where you've been," Irving said while briefing reporters on Yahoo!'s plans. "What we are building is really device and operating system agnostic," he said. "Tablets allow beautiful execution, and we will bring it into smaller forms down to mobile phones and then port it to PCs (personal computers) and TV." Livestand is intended as a platform for magazine or newspaper publishers big or small to deliver content matched with the interests of people who log into the Yahoo! online venue. "It's a digital newsstand, your digital newsstand," Yahoo! vice president of mobile product management Irv Henderson said while demonstrating Livestand. "The more you use this, the better it is at telling what you are interested in." Livestand will focus on tablet computers at launch, with Yahoo! keen on the soon-to-be released Honeycomb operating system that Google is developing for those types of devices. Digital magazines will be ad-supported, with Yahoo! sharing in the revenue with publishers, according to Henderson. The platform will eventually allow publishers other money-making options, including subscriptions, he said. News Corp.'s Rupert Murdoch last week launched "The Daily," a digital newspaper created for Apple's iPad, in the latest move in his drive to get consumers to pay for news online. Murdoch, an enthusiastic fan of the iPad, said there will be no print version of The Daily and it will only be available on Apple's touchscreen tablet computer for at least this year. The publication will eventually be available on other tablets. Murdoch is not the only publisher looking to the iPad for revenue, and most major US newspapers and magazines have created paid or free versions of their publications for the iPad. Livestand will launch on iPad and Android Honeycomb tablets, according to Henderson. "The PC is a great place to advertise, but you don't curl up with a PC," Irving said. "The tablet is something you curl up with." People will be able to log into free Yahoo! accounts to view personalized publications in Livestand "libraries." "This will be open to everyone," Henderson said. "We see a future where two people in a garage can publish a magazine with tools that we enable." Yahoo! is hoping that newspapers suffering from declining real-world circulation will use Livestand to ramp-up digital distribution and online advertising opportunities. Yahoo! said that while personalization is key to Livestand, it is being "savvy and super-sensitive" about letting people control their privacy. Yahoo! chief executive Carol Bartz has been recreating the Sunnyvale, California-based company after being eclipsed by Google in the Internet search market. Bartz has said that the goal is to be a digital media company that personalizes online content to each visitor. Yahoo! made a deal to have Microsoft's Bing handle search queries at its websites, leaving Yahoo! to concentrate on tailoring content to the interests of its more than half billion users around the world.
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HP hits tablet market with TouchPad San Francisco (AFP) Feb 9, 2011 US computer powerhouse Hewlett-Packard on Wednesday unveiled a TouchPad tablet computer as its entry in a booming market dominated by Apple's iPad. HP senior vice president Jon Rubinstein, who was part of the Apple team that brought the world the iPod, unveiled the TouchPad to applause in a pavilion on the San Francisco shoreline within sight of the Golden Gate Bridge. "TouchPad is more ... read more |
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