The 43-year-old attorney uses his tablet computer to  highlight legal briefs, take notes for court cases or flip though a  digital version of the California probate code."The laptop is so  limited," Mehta he said as he stood against the wall of a crammed Los  Angeles subway car, watching an episode of "Modern Family" on his  tablet. "But everything you want to do, this thing does."So long,  laptop? Not quite. But in just over a year, the tablet era ushered in by  Apple Inc.'s iPad has upended the personal computing  world.Manufacturers believe sales of tablets will eclipse those of  laptops in the U.S. by next year. Retailers are beginning to set aside  more space for tablets, shrinking display room for other computers.  Microsoft Corp., whose fortunes are still largely linked to the PC, saw  its largest one-day stock drop in two years last month on declining  software sales.As for netbooks, industry executives say those downsized  laptops are toast, as consumers opt for tablets instead."What the tablet  did was completely cannibalize the netbook," said Michael Hurlston, a senior vice president at Broadcom Corp., the Irvine, Calif., company that supplies microchips to  many of the largest computer and tablet manufacturers, including  Apple.Hurlston noted that sales of tablets were growing nearly three  times as fast as those of laptops.Worldwide, manufacturers are expected  to sell 50 million tablets this year, up from 19 million in 2010,  according to research firm Gartner Inc. In 2012, that number is  projected to top 100 million.Laptop sales, with 230 million units  expected this year, still dominate globally, but in the United States  they are expected to be leapfrogged by tablets much the same way that  laptops surpassed desktop PCs in the middle of last decade, where tablets have been a huge hit, PC sales fell 11 percent  in the first quarter compared with a year earlier, according to data  from market tracking firm IDC. It was the largest drop in nearly 10  years.At the Best Buy store in West Los Angeles, the amount of display  space devoted to tablets has quadrupled in the last year from 4 to 16  feet, manager Rafael Barragan said. That's nearly three times as much  shelf space as desktop PCs have there. Similar changes are being made  across the company's more than 1,000 U.S. stores, where "Tablet Central"  areas will be built starting this summer."There's definitely a huge  swing to the tablet market," Barragan said. "Pretty soon everything is  going to be touch screen."Apple is one of the major beneficiaries of the  tablet boom. Since introducing the iPad on April 5, 2010, the  Cupertino, Calif., company has reported $12.4 billion in sales of the  device.Many computer users still prefer the laptop's physical keyboard  for writing. And unlike PCs, tablets don't yet allow users to burn CDs  or DVDs, play more graphics-intensive video games or store large music  and photo collections. And with the glacial pace at which many companies  replace workstations, the millions of PCs parked on cubicle desks  around the world aren't likely to disappear overnight.Tablets, with  their limited screen size and lack of a keyboard, are not yet as  effective for tasks that involve a great deal of typing or creative  work. They are still a rare sight on college campuses, where students  need the versatility of laptops to crunch numbers and write long  papers.But early adopters say portable keyboards, wireless printing and  the wide availability of software and entertainment over the Web  probably will make tablets more appealing to laptop devotees.The tablet  is also becoming an all-in-one reading device, with access to digital  versions of thousands of books, newspapers and magazines.Apple in  particular has struck deals to sell digital books from all six major  U.S. book publishers, and this month Hearst Corp. said it would sell  iPad subscriptions to several of its magazines, including Esquire and  Popular Mechanics.News Corp.'s Daily was the first daily news magazine  to be sold through the iPad.The surge in tablets' popularity has led  Steve Jobs, Apple's co-founder and chief executive, to declare a new  chapter in computing. He is calling it "the post-PC era" - a noteworthy  pronouncement, given that 35 years ago, he was largely responsible for  ushering in the PC era in the first place.Apple still maintains a  healthy business in PCs, with laptops and desktops accounting for about  20 percent of the company's $25 billion in revenue last quarter. But  iPads, though just a year old, accounted for 11 percent of the quarter's  sales.Apple has yoked its future to its array of lower-cost,  consumer-friendly mobile devices, with the iPad emerging as the  keystone. In a launch event for the tablet in March, Jobs said he wanted  2011 to be the "the year of the iPad 2."Apple's rivals are hoping  otherwise. New tablets from a number of Apple's biggest competitors -  Motorola, Hewlett-Packard Inc., Research in Motion Ltd. - have hit  stores this year. Ads featuring tablets and  smartphones have flooded the airwaves as manufacturers battle for a  piece of the burgeoning tablet market.Lauren MacDonald's 4-year-old  Windows PC sits on a desk in her upstairs office. Meanwhile, she and her  husband are downstairs in the living room.With the television on in the  background, MacDonald, a 46-year-old teacher in Miamisburg, Ohio, sits  on the couch, surfing the Web and sending email on her tablet computer  while her husband plays games on his own handheld device."It's getting  to the point where you think, 'Oh no, I've got to log on to the computer  and wait for Windows to pull up?' " she said. With the iPad, though, "as soon as I push the button, it starts."
No comments:
Post a Comment