Acer will continue to manufacture netbooks, even as many of its manufacturing rivals shift their focus to super-thin ultrabooks and tablets.
Netbooks once proved a white-hot seller, snatched up by consumers interested in their low price and portability. Two opposing forces helped wither that market: manufacturers own desire to push products with higher margins (in mid-2009, at the height of the netbook craze, Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer told the audience at his company s Financial Analyst Meeting that the industry was already looking at higher-priced products capable of the same lightweight performance), and the emergence of tablets as the go-to device for many people on the go.
In the wake of that, many manufacturers shifted focus from netbooks to other product areas. Current rumors hint that Samsung is considering an exit from the segment altogether. However, Acer evidently sees the developing world as a market for the form-factor.
“There is still demand for netbooks in developing counties such as Indonesia and India, where netbooks have become critical tools among students for information education,” Scott Lin, corporate vice president and president of Acer s Taiwan operations, is quoted as saying in a Focus Taiwan report Nov. 27. “Acer will absolutely keep making netbooks.”
Acer is also joining in the rush to develop ultrabooks, or laptops that adhere to the same thin-and-light design as netbooks, only with more powerful hardware. Its Aspire S3-1 will compete against Asus UX21, Toshiba’s Dynabook, and other models expected to hit the market full-force in coming quarters. This January’s Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas will feature as many as 30 to 50 ultrabook models from various companies.
Intel remains an aggressive driver of the nascent ultrabook phenomenon, working with those manufacturers to ensure the devices conform to relatively strict standards.
In turn, the emphasis on ultrabooks is a sea change from this time in 2010, when most of the heavy-hitter manufacturers were busy toting an Android-based tablet. However, many of these iPad killers arrived on store shelves only to gather dust, sometimes selling well as niche products but certainly not challenging Apple’s millions of tablet sales.
Not to be outdone, Acer has explored the tablet market with products such as the Iconia Tab A100 and Windows-powered Tab W500. Even as it tries to carve off its own share of such newer markets, though, it seems unwilling to wholly abandon an old one.
To read the original eWeek article, click here: Acer: Netbook Production Will Continue