Netbook Sales Growth Outpaces Full Notebooks

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chaohsiangchen

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In most part of the planet, a netbook is what people can afford, and people need computers. If people can afford a full laptop, they will buy a full laptop. Some other people have needs for ultra mobile computers, and, as far as I know, most don't satisfy with netbooks and end up purchasing $2000 ultra portables.
 

r3t4rd

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I suppose it makes sense. Most people (not talking about us tech heads) like to keep in touch with the internet where ever they roam to especially with Wi-Fi hot spots popping up all over the place nowadays.

I'd prefer a 15" - 17" Notebook but that is me because I want the power to game a little (not play "Cry"sis, more like Starcraft to Half Life games and maybe a few newer ones) and do some more CPU intensive task than surfing the web and typing up documents.

I am looking into purchasing a netbook for traveling purposes and business trips.
 
It just proves that people like that it cheap and small. Not knowing how week and low power these netbooks are. These people think these will last years... ya right.. Not with that lame cpu and almost no memory. Spend a couple hundred more and get a cheap full size laptop.
 

doomtomb

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I think due to advertising, people are still under the wrong impression that these little netbooks will do everything a notebook can.
 
just goes to show most people who want a portable computer only uses it for e-mail and internet and light multimedia like music. and now they don't have to spend 500+ bucks to have that

for me i am intrested in the netbooks cause i would still mainly use my desktop pc but i would need to spend some time using it to see if i can put up with the small screen
 

Honis

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I think this goes to show how idiotic parents buying back to school items can be. Once people get burned when they want to do real computing, or see that there smarter friends are zipping around faster, we'll see a huge decline.

"Oh I can buy Jimmy a Netbook and an iPod for the price of that Laptop!"
 

Caffeinecarl

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I don't care how portable it is, if it gets beat by a decade old desktop then it's probably not worth me owning one. Heck, I think when it really comes down to it, a netbook is no better than an iphone, G1, Blackberry Storm or other comparable smartphone.

If you need a tiny computer, why not take that same $300 and pick up a good used 13" laptop and get a lot more power?
 

grieve

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[citation][nom]Honis[/nom]I think this goes to show how idiotic parents buying back to school items can be. Once people get burned when they want to do real computing, or see that there smarter friends are zipping around faster, we'll see a huge decline."Oh I can buy Jimmy a Netbook and an iPod for the price of that Laptop!"[/citation]

I disagree... If I were buying my Son a laptop for School i think a Netbook is perfect for those needs. There is no need for a $1200 unit to create word docs, use a calculator, cruise the net and check your mail.

I also think for many business needs Netbooks are a good buy as well... These people just like school kids don't need HD Movies or even a CD Drive for that matter.

I already have a sweet Desktop and a pretty nice Laptop... thus a Netbook is not required. I will be considering my "needs" on my next purchase and not excluding Netbooks from the equation. (I'll end up with a 2k laptop, lol)
 
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Not enough information is provided to make any Netbook vs. Notebook conclusions or speculate the popularity of Netbooks. Of those who purchased Netbooks over Notebooks, how many of them intend the Netbook to be their primary computer? It could be the case that a large portion of Netbook buyers obtain one to complement their desktop and/or existing laptop. As someone already stated, I would also imagine a large portion being unaware of the limitations of a Netbook.
 

chaohsiangchen

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[citation][nom]r3t4rd[/nom]not play "Cry"sis, more like Starcraft to Half Life games and maybe a few newer ones[/citation]

Depending on how new you meant. I play Starcarft with Pentium MMX 166MHz, and HL1 with Athlon 1400+/Ti4200. Atom is fast enough to play any 2D games, and, if you have Ion, could handle most games before 2004. Maybe except Rome:Total War, but I could be wrong.

Doom 3 and HL2 actually opened the new age of monster gaming rig with the introduction of OpenGL 2.1 and DirectX 9c. That made 2004 a remarkable year of gaming history.

With everything extra low, Crisis may just be barely playable with Atom/Ion combination. I've done that with Athlon X2 4850e and GeForce8200. It was laggy, unpleasant, but otherwise still runs.
 

lemonade4

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[citation][nom]TunaSoda[/nom]People just love watered down cheap stuff, I mean look at the compressed audio player craze...[/citation]

mp3 players?
 

cabose369

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Netbooks will out pace sales of notebooks for now but then you will see a large spike in notebook sales just before Christmas because everyone will realize how useless netbooks actually are and will buy notebooks instead.
 
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I think that netbooks are great and being honest most of the
pc's and laptops are not being used to their full potential just
like most of the people using the software and just want the latest
version of the software even if they don't really need it specially
if they are high school students.

I also think that many netbooks are used as secondary computers and
for example here in Mexico city they are becoming very popular because
they are cheap and they can be helpful even to a college student without problem because most college students here in Mexico live in their parents house so they can have a desktop computer to do the "hard" work and they can use the netbook as a small computer to make word documents, use old versions of photoshop(i have photoshop cs2 installed in mine and works ok not great but ok), autocad drawings(i have autocad 2007 installed and again works ok), so i don't see the problem with them and even if they are somewhat limited because of the price i can buy a new netbook in one year and dump the old one and do the same the next year, also if my netbook gets lost or stolen is not as hard to replace the computer as it can be with a laptop so i can give one to my little sister without having to worry so much about the laptop and what happens to it

By the way i am a Computer engineer so i know a thing or 2 about computers and i still think that they are great
good luck
 

huron

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I have a netbook for taking notes and doing basic word processing/e-mail. It's perfect in size and function for me. It is not my only machine, but is a great fit for those things. I think that far too many people get sucked into needing more power from their computer when so many only do basic internet/e-mail and word processing.

If you're going to do some audio/video editing or some gaming, or even some pretty big number crunching through statistics programs, a higher end computer may be for you, but for a lot of people, the function of netbooks or cheap laptops is all they need.

 

ptroen

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Netbooks could take away eventually the game console business since the chipsets inside the low end netbooks are pretty damn good and to most consumers they wouldn't be able to tell the difference. Add the small weight and ability to take em anywhere, this is a win win situation for game developers and consumers.
 
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