Acer: Dell and HP are sabotaging ultra-thin laptops

Wondering why thin and light laptops with monster battery life haven’t been a smashing success? Acer chairman J.T. Wang says Dell and HP are to blame.

According to DigiTimes, Wang says HP and Dell aren’t pushing the ultra-thin category hard enough, particularly in the United States. Instead, they’re slashing prices on mainstream notebooks, selling them for as little as $400.

As a result, Intel’s not seeing good enough sales on its consumer ultra-low voltage, or CULV, processors, Wang argued. In 2010, the chip maker plans to mainly push mainstream notebook platforms, possibly investing less in ultra-thins.

Ultra-thin laptops, such as Acer’s Aspire Timeline 3810T and Asus’ UL30a, tend to measure an inch thick or less, can last an entire work day on a charge and forgo an optical drive to trim down on bulk. They’re larger and more powerful than netbooks, but they can struggle with gaming and 1080p HD video, partly because many ultra-thins lack dedicated graphics cards (Asus’ UL80vt, on which I’m typing this, is an exception).

Wang believes that interest in ultra-thin laptops is stronger than HP and Dell would have Intel believe. At a recent trade show in Taiwan, ultra-thins accounted for half of Acer’s laptops sold. Wang didn’t say how Acer ultra-thins fared in 2009, but expects that they’ll account for 30 percent of sales next year, backed by new models in March or April.

Wang’s take on the ultra-thin market seems convoluted to me. HP and Dell aren’t totally ignoring the category, with HP’s ProBook 5310m and Pavilion DV2 (using AMD’s Athlon Neo processor) and Dell’s Inspiron 11z and the new Vostro V13. But Wang is essentially saying the competition isn’t focusing on the laptops he wants to compete with, but that’s of course their prerogative. And just last month, Wang was hinting at faster Intel chips on the horizon, presumably to power Acer’s upcoming models, so the situation doesn’t sound all bad.

In any case, Acer is the second-largest PC maker now. If ultra-thin notebooks haven’t flourished, it could just be because Acer’s offers haven’t been attractive enough.

Would you recommend this article?

Share

Thanks for taking the time to let us know what you think of this article!
We'd love to hear your opinion about this or any other story you read in our publication.


Jim Love, Chief Content Officer, IT World Canada

Featured Download

CDN Staff
CDN Staffhttps://channeldailynews.com
For over 25 years, CDN has been the voice of the IT channel community in Canada. Today through our digital magazine, e-mail newsletter, video reports, events and social media platforms, we provide channel partners with the information they need to grow their business.

Related Tech News

Featured Tech Jobs

 

CDN in your inbox

CDN delivers a critical analysis of the competitive landscape detailing both the challenges and opportunities facing solution providers. CDN's email newsletter details the most important news and commentary from the channel.