Showing posts with label Samantha Barker. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Samantha Barker. Show all posts

Monday, 18 February 2013

What ate PCs for lunch?*

Windows and Intel went up a hill selling a whole lot of computers. Windows fell down and broke its OS crown, and Intel’s profits came tumbling after...

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It was only a few years back when Wintel — a portmanteau of Windows and Intel — was synonymous with computing. Apple was struggling to survive while tablets belonged to the realm of science fiction. Mary Meeker, a partner in the US based venture capital firm Kleiner Perkins Caufield and Byers points out in her December 2012 State of the Web report that until about 2005, Wintel commanded 96 per cent of the global market for operating systems on personal computing platforms. Now that market has shrunk to 35 per cent.
Now it is a combination of iOS and Android that rules the roost with a 45 per cent share. Users are increasingly bypassing the PC, and picking up tablets and smartphones instead. Apple, in the first quarter of 2013, reported a drop in Mac sales to 4.1 million, down from 5.2 million for the same period last year. However, Apple foresaw the problem and switched lanes well in time — now its bread and butter comes from iPads and iPhones. Apple had a bumper year and posted a quarterly revenue of $54.5 billion (about Dh200.18 billion) and a quarterly net profit of $13.1 billion.
It also extended its empire with the iPad mini. As Mary Meeker’s report points out, “iPods changed the media industry, iPhones ramped even faster... iPad growth (3x iPhone) leaves its siblings in the dust.” She adds that the most sought-after item for American kids these days is an iPad.
Research firm Gartner estimates that compared to the fourth quarter of 2011, PC sales fell 4.9 per cent in the same period of 2012. International Data Corporation paints a bleaker picture — 89.8 million PCs were shipped worldwide in the fourth quarter of 2012, down 6.4 per cent compared to the fourth quarter of 2011. PC shipments in Europe, Middle East and Africa totalled 28.1 million units, a 9.6 per cent decrease from the fourth quarter of 2011. Advanced Micro Devices’ revenues tanked one-third, leading to a net loss of $473 million. Meanwhile, Intel’s fourth quarter revenues were down 3 per cent to $13.5 billion, compared to the same period last year, while profits were down 27 per cent. Stacy Smith, Intel’s CFO, attributes this partly to tablets.
Globally, Dell was hit hardest, with a dip of 20.9 per cent. No wonder its founder, Michael Dell, plans to make Dell private in a $22 billion buyout, and rejig its core business from manufacturing PCs to IT services.
The key question is — did the PC camp not see this tablet tsunami headed its way? Many analysts expected it would cause a few dents, not pull the rug from under, says Gartner’s analyst, Mikako Kitagawa. “Whereas once we imagined a world in which individual users would have both a PC and a tablet, we increasingly suspect that most will shift to a personal tablet. Most buyers will not replace secondary PCs in the household, instead allowing them to age out.
“There will be some individuals who retain both, but we believe they will be the exception and not the norm,” he adds.
A decade ago, it was hardware that was playing catch up with software. But the chase is over, and even the traditional PC bastion of gaming is seeing a challenge. At the recent CES, Razer showcased a Windows 8 gaming tablet with a graphic card and buttons, while Archos came with the GamePad, an Android tablet with dedicated keys.
Barclays Capital’s hardware analyst Ben Reitzes says, “We believe a new generation of consumers and IT workers are figuring out how to compute differently than those that started using PCs in the 90s — relying more on mobile devices and the cloud — as PCs see significant task infringement by the day. Most PC industry players still don’t seem to realise what is happening — and don’t have contingency plans.”
Adding to the woes of the PC industry, the launch of Windows 8 did not result in buyers lining up to buy PCs sporting the touch-friendly OS.
David Daoud, research director at IDC, says, “Consumers expected all sorts of cool PCs with tablet and touch capabilities. Instead, they mostly saw traditional PCs that feature a new OS optimised for touch and tablet with applications and hardware that are not yet able to fully utilise these capabilities.”
However, PCs will not vanish. Forrester Research predicts two billion PCs and 760 million tablets worldwide by 2016. Its analyst Frank Gillett says, “Eventually tablets will slow laptop sales but increase sales of desktop PCs. That’s because many people, especially information workers, will still need conventional PCs for any intensely creative work at a desk that requires a large display or significant processing power.”

    By Deepak Karambelkar 

Thursday, 10 November 2011

Top tips on how to be a morning person

A pan-European survey of 11,000 people, commissioned by Philips Wake-up Light, has revealed that British people are among the grumpiest in Europe when it comes to waking up in the morning.

The research showed that 90% of us admit that we don't feel refreshed, alert (93%) or ready for the day (68%) first thing in the morning. Furthermore more than 70% of us admit to being negatively affected by darker mornings.
One of the UK's leading sleep experts, Dr Neil Stanley, shares his advice on how you can help yourself become a morning person.
Here are his top five tips for being a 'morning person':
1. Don't rely on coffee to wake you up. The caffeine content of coffee can vary greatly depending on where it's bought or how it's made. In the past, tests have shown that the average cup of coffee does not contain enough milligrams of caffeine to have any pick-me-up effect, so you may actually be getting no benefit at all from the coffee you convince yourself you need to help you start the day.
2. Don't press the snooze button, instead set the alarm for the time you have to wake up and then get up at THAT time. The extra sleep is far more beneficial for your body than the time spent 'snoozing'.
3. Try and have a regular time that you get out of bed, and stick to that time even on the weekends. The body starts preparing itself to wake up one hour before you actually do, so the routine helps the body know when to start to prepare.
4. Alarm clocks can often startle you out of sleep, which is not perhaps the best start to the day. Dawn simulators offer a solution that allows you to wake-up more naturally.
5. Finally, the best way to feel awake and refreshed in the morning is to make sure you get a decent amount of sleep the night before.

Written by; Zoe Zahra, deputy editor, MSN Life & Style

Monday, 26 September 2011

AMD Launches 'Llano' Vision Technology






Advanced Micro Devices launches its “Llano” platform, the Fusion processors for mainstream desktop and notebook PCs In the Middle East (UAE)
Creative Concepts managed the Llano Launch event for AMD on 20th September 2011.


  • The event comprised of product presentations and individual track sessions.
  • Event targeting AMD’s Consumer, Commercial and Component partners in the Middle East.
  • Demo’s unit on display to experience the Vision Technology.






  • Ending the event with stunning ‘Extreme Gravity’ performance.