Apple Gobbled up 91 Percent of Premium PC Market in June

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Apple may be a small player in terms of overall PC market share, but in the premium price segment, the Macintosh is king.

In June, nine out of 10 dollars spent on computers costing $1,000 and up went to Apple in the U.S. market, according to research company NPD Group. That spells out to 91 percent of the “premium” price segment gobbled up by Macs — up from 88 percent in May.

Granted, Windows PC systems still own 90 percent of the U.S. PC market share. Still, this is a victory for Apple, a company whose focus is on quality products with premium price tags.

These numbers make it crystal clear why Apple continues to avoid stepping into the netbook market with a $400 to $500 offering: Even in a recession, it doesn’t need to. This also illustrates that the recent price cuts made to the MacBook family were indeed an effective move.

Apple has 91% of market for $1,000+ PCs, says NPD [BetaNews]

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Photo: Jim Merithew/Wired.com


So Long Desktop PC, You Suck

Desktop PCs have been in decline for a decade, and countless people have said their piece about it. But new evidence suggests the desktop tower’s death spiral is underway—and we’re not too broken up about it.

I say this as a guy who was baptized into the tech world with a desktop; who still obsessively follows the latest PC components from Intel, Nvidia, ATI and the like; who has built, fixed or upgraded more towers than I care to remember; and who, until a few years ago, was an avid PC gamer. As someone who would be, by most measures, a desktop-PC kinda guy, I just can’t go on pretending there’s a future for them.

The State of the Industry
This is more than a hunch; a grim future is borne out by the numbers. A week ago, iSuppli issued a broad report on the state of the PC industry. The leading claim was predictable: The PC industry was experiencing lower-than-expected quarterly sales—down about 8% from the same time last year. This included laptops, and made sense, because the whole economy’s gone to hell, right? People aren’t buying computers.

Except that’s not quite what’s happening. In the same period, laptop shipments—already higher than desktop shipments on the whole—grew 10% over last year. Desktops were entirely to blame, dropping by an astounding 23%. That’s not decline—it’s free fall.

Stephen Baker, an analyst for industry watchers NPD, shared with me a wider picture of how retail PC sales break down. The way he put it made measuring the rise and fall of sales percentages seem dumb—there really aren’t any sales to lose: “In US retail, 80% of sales are notebooks now,” he said. “Start throwing in stuff like iMacs and all-in-ones”—which share more hardware DNA with laptops and netbooks than traditional desktops—”and it gets even higher.”

The Buyer’s Dilemma
To understand why this is happening doesn’t take anything more than a little empathy. Put yourself in the shoes of any number of potential consumers, be it kids, adults, techies, or luddites. In virtually any scenario, a laptop is the sensible buy.

Take my dad. Despite spending three decades in front of commercial jet instrument panels, his relationship with computers is, at best, strained. When he came to me a few months ago asking for advice about a laptop to replace his desktop, I assumed it was a just a whim, based on what he saw happening around him. It wasn’t, at all. As someone who uses a computer mostly for news, email, music, etc—like a significant part of the population—he was actually being intensely rational. A laptop would do everything he needs simply and wirelessly, with a negligible price difference from a functionally equivalent desktop. If he wants a monitor, keyboard and mouse, he can just attach them. Choosing a desktop PC wouldn’t just be a not-quite-as-good choice—it’d be a bad one.

The TradeoffsLet’s look at mainly stock examples taken (hastily) from Dell’s current product line. Their configurations could be tweaked and changed to make desktops look slightly better or slightly worse, but we chose them because they are typical budget-minded consumer choices. We are not talking about workstations, and we’re not talking about all-in-ones, because if anything, they are keeping this category alive. When it comes to pure household computer buying, you can hunt for deals all you want, but laptops and desktops are more closely paired than you might expect.

That’s not to say that there aren’t noticeable tradeoffs. Graphics performance, although I wasn’t specifically angling for that with these configurations, is generally better in a desktop. Likewise, hard drives—being that desktops use larger, cheaper 3.5-inch units—are faster and more capacious across the board. Greater amounts of RAM can be had for less in a desktop, the optical drives can be slightly faster, and the ports for those and other drives can be used for expansion.

But these tradeoffs aren’t nearly as pronounced as they once were, nor are they as consequential. On account of the huge demand and sales volume, newer mobile processors have become a hotbed for innovation, now rivaling most any desktop processor, and mobile graphics engines—though still markedly inferior to dedicated desktop cards—have improved vastly in recent years, to a point where most consumers are more than satisfied.

And if you really look out for them, there are some amazing deals to be had on new notebooks. (Look at Acer’s 15-inch, 2.1GHz Core 2 Duo, 4GB DDR3 RAM laptop with 1GB GeForce GT130 graphics card and Blu-ray for $750, and then try to build the equivalent in a desktop at the same price.)

The important takeaway here is that the performance sacrifice you make in owning laptop is minimal, and mitigated, or even outweighed, by its practical advantages. Want a bigger screen on your notebook? Hook it up your HDTV. Want more storage? Buy a cheap, stylish bus-powered external USB drive. Want to use your desktop on the toilet? Good freakin’ luck.

The image associated with this post is best viewed using a browser.The Fall of the Gaming PC
But to say that the average user doesn’t have any reason to buy a hulking beige box isn’t that controversial, and even borders on obvious. The real, emotional, diehard support for the form factor is going to be found elsewhere anyway. I mean, hey, what about gamers? Have you ever tried to play Crysis on an Inspiron? Let’s jump back to the numbers.

Last year saw a huge 26% increase in game sales across platforms, powered mostly by Xbox 360, Wii and Nintendo DS sales, according to NPD. Breaking that number down, we see PC game sales down by 14%. That decrease barely even registered in the broader scheme of things, since total PC game sales amounted to just $700m of the industry’s $11b take. This year is looking even worse. You know what, let’s just call this one too: PC gaming? Also dead. Update: Luke at Kotaku points out that NPD’s numbers only cover retail game sales, where PC gaming is hurting the most. Due mostly to MMOs—hardly the exclusive domain of desktops—the PC gaming industry take is actually higher.

As the laptop is to my old man, the console is to the gamer. Just a few years ago, buying—or just as likely, building—a high-end gaming PC granted you access to a rich, unique section of the gaming world. Dropping a pile of cash for ATI’s Radeon 9800 to get that precious 128MB of VRAM was damn well worth it, since there was no other way to play your Half Life 2 and your Doom 3. PC titles were often demonstrably better than console games, and practically owned the concept of multiplayer gaming—a situation that’s changed, or even reversed, since all the major consoles now live online. We even spotted a prominent PC magazine editor (and friend of Giz) copping on Twitter to buying an Xbox game because it has multiplayer features the PC version doesn’t. Yes, things are different now.

NPD’s Baker sees it too: “Go back two years ago and think about all the buzz that someone like Falcon or Alienware or Voodoo was generating, and how much buzz they generate now, that might be a little bit telling.” He adds, “There’s considerably less interest in high powered gaming machines.” They’re luxury items in every sense, from their limited utility to their ridiculous price to their extremely low sales.

A Form Factor on Life Support
But no matter how irrational a choice the desktop tower is for the regular consumer, sales won’t hit zero anytime soon. As we’ve hinted, much of this can be explained by simple niche markets: Some businesses will always need powerful workstations; older folks will feel comfortable with a familiar form factor; some people will want a tower as a central file or media server; DIY types will insist on the economy and environmental benefit of desktop’s upgradeability; and a core contingent of diehard PC gamers, despite their drastically thinning ranks, will keep on building their LED-riddled, liquid-cooled megatowers until the day they die.

Baker sees another factor—less organic, more cynical—that’ll keep the numbers from bottoming too hard. “Desktops are a lot more profitable than notebooks for a lot of reasons, not the least of which is that big shiny monitor, which has a nice margin attached to it. For the retailers, people tend to buy a lot more peripherals and accessories when they buy desktops than when they buy notebooks.” Even if the volumes are ultra-low and concept is bankrupt, retailers are going to keep bloated, price-inflated desktops and desktop accessories out there on the sales floor until they’ve drained every last dollar out of them.

You’ll see plenty of desktop towers for years to come, in megamarts if not in people’s homes. You’ll still hear news about the latest, greatest graphics cards, desktop processors and the like. Enthusiasts and fansites will stay as enthusiastic and fanatical as they’ve ever been. These, though, are lagging indicators, trailing behind a dead (or maybe more accurately, undead) computing ideal that the computer-using public has pretty much finished abandoning.

Edelweiss PC casemod goes above and beyond insanity

Sure, these days, it can be pretty hard to get super-stoked over a casemod… after all, they’re basically a dime a dozen. We’re always impressed with the crazy ones though, and this one — the Edelweiss (possibly named after our least-favorite song and flower) really takes the crazy and turns it up to 11. We’re not even sure what’s going on, to be honest, but we can assure you of this much: we’re really, really fond of it. Two more shots after the break.

[Via Case Mod Blog]

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Edelweiss PC casemod goes above and beyond insanity originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 27 Jun 2009 13:15:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Gateway unveils DX mini-tower and SX small form factor PCs

Nettop? All-in-one? Sometimes you just want a good ole’ fashioned desktop, and that’s where Gateway‘s new DX and SX PCs come into play. The SX small form factor, pictured above, has packed in a 2.33GHz Intel Core 2 Quad with GMA X4500 integrated graphics, 4GB DDR3 SDRAM, 640GB HDD, a 18x DVD writer, multi-card reader, nine USB 2.0 ports, multi-card reader, firewire and eSATA, HDMI and VGA outputs, and Windows Vista Home Premium 64-bit. Asking price for that setup is $499, but if you’re looking to game, we don’t see much room for adding a hipper graphics card. On the slightly heftier side, the DX mini-tower boasts either an Intel Core 2 Quad or AMD Phenom X4 with NVIDIA GeForce G210 / ATI Radeon 4650 graphics cards, respectively, up to 8GB DDR3 and 1TB HDD, eight USB 2.0 ports, and all the other amenities of the SX for a starting price of $750. Both models are expected for release end of June, which means pretty much now-ish. To top it off, the company’s also just released a new FHD display series in 21.5, 23, and 24-inch varieties, and it looks like there’s been a spec refresh to its LX and FX desktop lines. Full press release after the break.

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Gateway unveils DX mini-tower and SX small form factor PCs originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 24 Jun 2009 19:34:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Video: hands-on with ASUS’ Eee Keyboard at Computex

We first caught sight of ASUS’ totally weird Eee Keyboard — a full PC with an Intel Atom N270 CPU built in — way back at CES in January. Well, our friends at Engadget Chinese have laid hands on it at Computex, and it’s looking a bit different than what we expected… and a whole lot more awesome. The 5-inch, 800 x 480 pixel touchscreen display/trackpad on the right side of the keyboard, is, as it turns out, running a standalone version of XP, and serves as the shortcut screen to most of the included software — including Skype, MSN, and music playback controls. Our friends found the touchscreen to work extremely well, and though we don’t know anything rock solid about pricing or availability yet (we hear it will launch by the end of June, we do know that it will come in two flavors — wired and and UWB wireless — with the wireless version housing a battery which gets about two hours of use before needing a charge. There’s a video (in Chinese) showing this badboy off after the break. Hit the read link for a full gallery of photos.

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Video: hands-on with ASUS’ Eee Keyboard at Computex originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 04 Jun 2009 19:54:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Dell Studio One 19 reviewed, deemed totally sufficient but not awesome

Dell’s touchscreen Studio One 19’s been showboating around the States for a few weeks now, so it’s no surprise to see the verdicts start rolling in. Computer Shopper’s just reviewed the unit, and while they give it points for its slim and stylish form factor, and for the implementation of the touchscreen, they take away a few for the cloth-laden accents, and complain that the high-end models are expensive and underpowered. They’re basically fans of the lower-end configurations, but warn that they don’t really think the unit would be very family friendly. There’s one more shot of the 19 after the break, and hit the read link for the full review.

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Dell Studio One 19 reviewed, deemed totally sufficient but not awesome originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 19 May 2009 12:02:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Insane Russian casemod shamelessly puts good taste to bed once and for all

We see plenty of wild casemods around here — staying on the pulse of what’s new with the cool kids is part of our jobs. We’ve never really seen anything like this one, however. We don’t know a terrible lot about the case — just that it’s made of what appears to be solid evil dipped in bronze, and lit by the blood of a terrifying hellbeast. Regardless: it’s going to look great in your living room… once you convince Satan to sell it to you for a reasonable price, that is. One more terrifically horrendous photo after the break.

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Insane Russian casemod shamelessly puts good taste to bed once and for all originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 18 May 2009 10:31:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Transparent Mac SE/30 is Plain Beautiful

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You thought that the iMac G3 was the first see-through Mac? So did I, until I saw this stunning, transparent Mac SE/20.

It is only one of 10 clear-cased test models, run out of the mold before the rough texturing was added. They were used to make sure that all the internal parts fit properly before signing off on production.

True to Apple form, this isn’t just some half-baked internal test run — look closely and you’ll see that it has a colored Apple logo on the front panel. This particular Macintosh was owned by a Charlie Springer, and was sold back in 2006 for an undisclosed sum. You can bet it went for more than an old iMac G3, though: I saw one on sale yesterday in the local Cash Converters for just €50 ($66).

Product page [Regnirps via Retro Thing]


MSI Offers Cheapest All-in-one TouchScreen Desktop

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Last month MSI, a Taiwanese manufacturer better known for its netbooks, announced a new 18.5-inch
touchscreen desktop PC. Now the company has disclosed a recession-friendly price tag of $530 for the machine.

All-in-one desktop computers also called ‘kitchen PCs’ have become important to PC makers who are betting consumers want a sleek, touchscreen desktop in their home for web surfing,
leaving notes and checking internet videos.

Four major PC makers including Dell, HP, Asus and MSI now offer all-in-one systems with
touchscreens instead of keyboards.

The new MSI Wind desktop is available with an Atom processor, 2GB of
RAM, a 160 GB hard drive, 1.3 megapixel webcam and WiFi capability.

At $530, the machine is the cheapest in the market. The Asus Eee Top costs $600, while Dell’s all-in-one machine, yet to launch in the U.S., has been priced at $800 for a touchscreen model.

Also see:
Stylish Touchscreen ‘Kitchen PCs’ Set to Grab Consumers
Dell Joins ‘Kitchen PCs’ Trend With New Desktop

Photo: MSI

Modder Turns Computer Into Awesome WALL-E Bot

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Cut from metal sheets, this computer case modded into a WALL-E robot (above) is one of the most bad ass gadget mods we’ve ever seen. A Russian hobbyist spent 18 days cutting and detailing each part of the lovable Pixar hero; he photographs the entire process step-by-step.

Perhaps one day we’ll see a Mac modded into an Eve?

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Photo: Casemods.ru