Who killed the PC?

Published: 12 July 2000 y., Wednesday
A quick survey around the show floor at PC Expo last week in New York finds gadgets galore. Noticeably absent are major PC makers, such as Compaq Computer, Dell Computer and Micron Electronics. If anything, this year's show is more like the "Gadget Expo," with handhelds and wireless devices drawing large crowds. But Gateway, Hewlett-Packard and IBM have large booths, and IBM has been drawing gawking onlookers with its wearable PC. Will gadgets replace the PC? "No," says Ralph Martino, vice president of strategy and marketing for IBM's personal systems group. "Yes, there's a lot of talk the PC guys didn't show up at PC Expo. Well, we're here. All the excitement may be about these other devices, but those devices need to be managed and need something to provide extended connectivity." Martino is convinced the PC is not going away and says predictions to the contrary are misguided. In a report released earlier this month, eTForecasts predicted that Internet appliances and non-PC devices are the wave of the future. But the Buffalo Grove, Ill. -based research company also concluded that PC sales will explode, in part to support the new devices. The eTForecasts report also predicts that by 2005, 55 percent of Internet users will rely on Web appliances for at least part of their surfing, up from 2 percent this year.
Šaltinis: WinFile Update
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

Bull Appoints Shahrom Kiani as new General Manager of its subsidiary AddressVision, Inc (AVI)

Bull has appointed Shahrom Kiani as new General Manager of its subsidiary AddressVision, Inc (AVI). more »

The man who invented the cash machine

The world's first ATM was installed in a branch of Barclays in Enfield, north London, 40 years ago this week. more »

Work Delivers High-Speed Business Services Over Cisco IP Next-Generation Network

Cisco Ethernet Fiber to the Business Solution Helps @Work Offer Business Connections Up to 1 Gigabit per Second more »