Netbooks ate 20% of regular notebook sales last year
  • 2 Comments
by John Biggs on January 16, 2009

capturegartner-thumb-480x192
BBG has an interesting bit about how netbooks nicked 20% off of standard laptop revenue even though there was a 1% increase in revenue. Why? Because foolish laptop manufacturers have been gunning for that sub-$999 price point for years now and now that they finally hit it they can’t bring it back up to sane levels thanks to sub-$500 netbooks.

When I worked at Laptop Magazine a few years ago, all the rage was sub-$1000 laptops. Everyone was talking about it and expecting a new renaissance of sales thanks to these Wal-mart notebooks. Sadly, they did too good a job. By selling low-cost, low-power notebooks, they basically cannabilzed their “big notebook” sales by convincing folks that once they had one laptop, they didn’t need another one.

Think about it: you have a year or two-year-old Dell. It runs XP Home. All is well. Then you think I’d like to upgrade and look for a laptop. A few netbooks out there actually run Vista fairly well, you buy one for $600 – half the price of the Dell – and ignore all the power limitations. You get a wonky little machine that barely runs Vista but seems to do everything you need it to do. You’re mildly miffed and can’t afford anything better so you’re stuck until next year. The manufacturers shot themselves in the foot.

Comments rss icon

  • I’m not liking this ‘year of the netbook’ crap that is going down. Until they can jam more resolution into the screens (like sony) then I am just not interested at all. They need to start dualing up the atom processors, stick in 2gb of ram and up the resolution on the screens before im interested. That and something more than a 12gb ssd or whatever crap they put in them now.

Leave Comment

Commenting Options

Enter your personal information to the left, or sign in with your Facebook account by clicking the button below.

Alternatively, you can create an avatar that will appear whenever you leave a comment on a Gravatar-enabled blog.

Trackback URL
bugbugbug