I finally understand some the hype around tablet devices. I gave a tablet and received one during the holidays and I’ve been attached at the hip with mine ever since. However, hour for hour, I still spend more time at and do more with my PC and use the tablet as a supplement.
Between setting up two tablets and one new PC in the past month, I’ve discovered I hate touchscreens and I’m still waiting for someone to tell me why Windows 8 is a good idea. It takes me three or four times as long to type anything onto tiny tablet touchscreens and typos run rampant. I sometimes have to tap commands two or three times on the tablets and I can’t find any familiar menus on Windows 8, so the PC is running with minimum efficiency at the moment.
I’m not at all surprised that PC sales dropped in Q4.
IDC reports worldwide PC shipments totaled 89.8 million units in the fourth quarter of 2012, down 6.4 percent compared to the same quarter in 2011 and worse than the forecast decline of 4.4 percent. The analyst attributes the drop, in part, to unmet expectations of newer, cooler PCs and features. I disagree -- the PC I bought in December has a bigger screen, a sleeker look, and is more lightweight than anything I’ve owned in the past, and it cost the same as an iPad mini. Too bad I gave up in frustration from customizing it. (For a different perspective, see Year of the Phablets.)
Here’s some additional analysis from IDC:
Although the quarter marked the beginning of a new stage in the PC industry with the launch of Windows 8, its impact did not quickly change recently sluggish PC demand, and the PC market continued to take a back seat to competing devices and sustained economic woes. As a result, the fourth quarter of 2012 marked the first time in more than five years that the PC market has seen a year-on-year decline during the holiday season.
The lackluster fourth quarter results were not entirely surprising given the spate of challenges the PC market faced over the course of 2012. IDC had expected the second half of 2012 to be difficult. Consumers as well as PC vendors and distribution channels continued to be diverted from PC sales by ongoing demand for tablets and smartphones. In addition, questions about the use of touch on Windows PCs vs. tablets slowed commercial spending on PCs.
"Although the third quarter was focused on the clearing of Windows 7 inventory, preliminary research indicates the clearance did not significantly boost the uptake of Windows 8 systems in Q4," said Jay Chou, senior research analyst with IDC's Worldwide Quarterly PC Tracker. "Lost in the shuffle to promote a touch-centric PC, vendors have not forcefully stressed other features that promote a more secure, reliable and efficient user experience. As Windows 8 matures, and other corresponding variables such as Ultrabook pricing continue to drop, hopefully the PC market can see a reset in both messaging and demand in 2013."
I don’t think the PC vs. tablet choice is an either/or decision. Pricing has enabled consumers to own both -- and then some. Tablets are still not as good as PCs for a lot of things (including writing). I’m certain some consumers that would have bought a PC last year opted for a tablet, but they are using the tablet for what it’s meant for: entertainment and mobile communications. There is still a huge base of PC users who don’t want their PCs to look and act like a smartphone or tablet.
I think the PC/tablet/smartphone market is pushing a convergence users aren’t ready for. I don’t want a touch-centric PC and even if Windows 8 was easy to use, I’d still resist it as a touch-only interface. I understand Windows’s desire for a single platform for phones, tablets, and PCs, but it doesn’t have to cater only to touch. If the PC market is resting its hopes on the maturation of Windows 8 to spur future sales -- as IDC suggests -- then indeed it will be facing a tough market through 2013.
@Barbra: Is it possible to know model for tablet and PC? If tablet is Android, does it have speech recognition? Will this help you?
PC/Laptiop and tablet have different usage. Tablet is light to carry, battery lasts 10 hours, you can easily use while in bad, moves with you easily in home and works as internet radio/TV.
However, I agree - tocuh screen features are not attractive for hardcore work and good keyboard is very essential.
Kayode, I agree mobile devices are more trendy, portable and simply usable on the go. These I think supports consumers' desire to own a tablet over traditional PC in spite of touch screens' shortcomings.
You are right, I not sure any tablet user will not agree with the fact that typing on touchscreen is not that easy but then, probably that is where technology is today and everybody love to be on top of it.I started a board along this asking what would be the next technology after touchscreen, probably voice command or something else.
@Barbara, I also have a tablet whereby I am cojoined. Last week I previewed a Google dedicated laptop for $199.00. The user is confined to all Google Webapps for the office suites etc, but the demo was very impressive and the PC would serve a huge contingent of the population who are not power users. It is not a tablet, and not quite a free standing laptop but it is something in the middle and may succeed as many people already subscribe to Google for mail and document management. I don't understand Windows 8 unless you are willing to dump your old non-touchscreen monitor and start learning another skill set while stil trying to remain at the same productivity level. I contend that unless MS can prove that Windows 8 actually improves productivity, many companies will decline to adopt it for some time to come.
@anadvy: I feel like such a Luddite, but touchscreens are driving me crazy. The one thing I haven't tested yet is the Sueface, whihc has a keyboard attachment. That might be a bridge folks like us need.
It takes me three or four times as long to type anything onto tiny tablet touchscreens and typos run rampant.
@Barbara, I totally agree with your observation. Its pretty hard to type on touchscreen and that is the reason I dont like tablets. I feel its better to buy ultrabook which can bet converted into a tablet rather than buying the tablet directly.
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