Saturday, 15 March 2014
Google-Samsung romance
Posted by techblown
That said, overall market share for Chromebooks is still small.
Chromebook sales for 2013 represented somewhere around 1% of total
global notebook sales last year, according to Nomura. But they're
obviously catching on in the United States, and some analysts, including
Nomura analyst Rick Sherlund, only expect that figure to grow.
Since the PC industry's growth has gone flatter than a map drawn in the Dark Ages, any faint trace of momentum is promising -- or terrifying, if you're Microsoft.
Samsung says consumers are starting to embrace and understand Chromebooks, which essentially only run the Web. The company says it has noticed a drop-off in retail returns of Chromebooks, which Samsung attributes to Google's improving Chrome OS software and the Chromebook hardware being more usable for the average person.
But there's a larger shift at play as well. Smartphones and tablets are becoming more powerful, and the PC is becoming less important for our daily needs. Outside of what we do at work, most of what we actually need a laptop for is what a Chromebook is limited to: Web browsing.
We are fast approaching a reality where the Internet is omnipresent and devices use the cloud -- and not USB cables -- to talk to one another. Even the few offline tasks -- word processing, spreadsheets, and media consumption -- can be carried out on a Chromebook nearly as well as on a PC.
Chromebooks haven't become objectively better than Windows PCs, and they're not selling by the truckload. But Chromebooks are ready for mainstream adoption. They're starting to make many of us realize how non-essential a $1000 laptop is becoming. And they can compete with most of the cheaper laptops.About Admin of the Blog:
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