Providing market intelligence for more than 35 years

Dallas Morning News

Tablets such as iPad cast a shadow of doubt over laptops

In August, Dallas-based research firm Parks Associates surveyed more than 500 Americans who owned an iPad or planned to buy one soon. More than one-third said Apple's tablet had caused them to delay or cancel plans to buy a laptop.

But tablets probably aren't going to render laptops extinct, said Harry Wang, Parks Associates' director of mobile and health research.

"The tablet would definitely cannibalize sales of netbooks and laptops," he said, noting that many desktop PC owners are replacing hulking towers with portable computers. "But to kill the two categories, I think the risk of that is very low."

All that competition and innovation in the tablet business means that while laptops might be spared for now, they could eventually be deposed in the same way desktop computers are now being dispatched.

"Beyond five years, I think the tablet definitely has potential to replace the laptop completely," Wang said.

From the article, "Tablets such as iPad cast a shadow of doubt over laptops" by Victor Godinez

Previously In The News

Home security is going high-tech to counter housing bust

While almost every other piece of the consumer electronics business has gotten wired and then wireless over the last 10 years, home security systems have remained stubbornly low-tech. "The securit...

Cable disputes could lead TV viewers to other options

Parks Associates' Scherf said that if Apple really wants to revolutionize the video delivery business, it will have to position the new device and service to a mass market, as it did with the iPhone...

Blockbuster adds video games to by-mail subscription program

The number of game console owners who are spending money on a monthly basis to download games jumped to 29 percent this year from 8 percent in 2008, according to consumer research from Dallas-based...

AT&T-Verizon effort to test use of smart phones as mobile wallets

AT&T Inc. and Verizon Wireless , the biggest U.S. mobile carriers, are planning a venture to displace credit and debit cards with smart phones, posing a new threat to Visa Inc. and MasterCard Inc.,...