Report: Tablets To Grab Market Share over Netbooks
        
        
        
        		Tablet  handheld computers will begin to outsell netbooks in two years in the United States, according to Forrester Research.
The  Massachusetts-based research firm classifies tablets as a "form of  personal computer," even though the definition is sometimes considered up  for debate by the industry. By 2014, consumers predominantly will use tablets over  netbooks. In 2015, Forrester predicted, tablets will constitute 23 percent  of PC unit sales.
According to  Forrester's report, "The  US Consumer PC Market In 2015," published last month, PC sales will  reach nearly 500 million units in the United States between 2010 and  2015. Forrester lumped PCs into four categories: traditional desktops,  netbooks, notebooks, and tablets. However, tablets represent the fastest growing  category, according to the report. Tablet sales will grow from 3.5 million  units in 2010 to more than 20 million units in 2015.
In 2015,  Forester projected, notebooks will have 42 percent of the market, while  tablets will have 23 percent, followed by desktops at 18 percent and netbooks  at 17 percent. 
Forrester's announcement noted that vendors will need to capitalize on this trend with "chipsets,  displays, accessories and content that anticipate the growth of tablets and the  continued relevance of traditional PCs." Forrester said it doesn't see desktops  disappearing soon.
"I  wouldn't characterize it as a move away from desktops," said Sarah Rotman  Epps, author of the report and research analyst at Forrester, in an e-mail. "It's  true that in 2015, U.S.  consumers will buy fewer desktops than they do today (15.7 [million] in 2015 [versus] 18.7 [million] in  2010), but more consumers will own desktops (158 [million]) than any other form factor.  Slowing sales of desktops can be attributed to market saturation rather than  lack of interest."
In a blog post this week, Epps said that interested parties ("even those not in  direct competition with Apple") should keep a close eye on the adoption of  Apple's iPad. She said Apple is claiming that 50 percent of Fortune 500  companies around the world are "deploying or piloting" the iPad. She  noted in an e-mail that they are probably doing it on a small scale for CEOs,  board members, and execs.
Consumers  were not looking for iPad features before the device was introduced into the  market, Epps noted in her report. The top features that consumers value in a PC  are a complete mismatch with iPad offerings. 
"Top [consumer]  features included webcam, CD drive and burner, and DVD drive and burner,"  said Epps in an e-mail. "Through advertising and devoting in-store real  estate to a hands-on iPad experience, Apple has successfully educated consumers  about this new product."
One of the  reasons tablet sales will expand over netbook sales is that netbooks aren't  able to "synchronize data across services like iPad does," Epps said.
Apple has continued to describe healthy sales results with the iPad. In an earnings  announcement this week, Apple said it sold 3.7 million iPads in the quarter  ending June 26. The company estimated it would ship about 270,000 units per  week in this quarter. Apple's numbers, according to Epps, are global,  representing about 19 countries worldwide and include both consumer and  enterprise deployments.
Epps said  that there's still an opportunity to market desktops in the consumer market as  complementary to tablets for the multi-PC consumer because consumers will still  need the processing power of a desktop to power the multimedia lifestyle.
"We'll  see continued interest in space-saving all-in-ones, special-purpose PCs like  the Mac Mini for the living room stereo stack, and new uses for desktops like  3D PCs for gaming and 3D photo and video editing," Epps said.
She noted in  her blog that this initial forecast was conservative and that an update will  be published later this year.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Herb Torrens is an award-winning freelance writer based in Southern California. He managed the MCSP program for a leading computer telephony integrator for more than five years and has worked with numerous solution providers including HP/Compaq, Nortel, and Microsoft in all forms of media.