Windows 8 not likely to restart ailing PC market

Microsoft's launch of Windows 8 amid great fanfare yesterday left many users wondering whether the new operating system can prove a big boost to the ailing PC market.


Microsoft's launch of Windows 8 amid great fanfare yesterday left many users wondering whether the new operating system can prove a big boost to the ailing PC market.

Analysts said today that while Windows 8 may help keep the business afloat, it probably won't be enough to return the business to anywhere near its former glory.

"Unfortunately, it seems unlikely that Windows 8 will be enough to turn around PC sales," said Charles King, an analyst at Pund-IT.

"At the end of the day, IT sales depend as much on customer confidence as they do on vendor innovation," King said. "Vendors can occasionally nudge a market in one direction or another, a bit like a tugboat guides a far larger ship. But no single company can drag broader markets along in its wake."

The PC industry has been struggling mightily in recent years under the weight of a sluggish worldwide economy and a growing consumer infatuation with trendy products like Apple's iPad.

Many analysts have said that while some enterprises have been holding off laptop and desktop purchase until Windows 8 comes out, others have been turning to tablets and smartphones as replacements for the traditional systems.

Robert Enderle, an analyst at the Enderle Group, said the PC business should get help from at least some some pent up demand from the companies waiting for the release of Windows 8.

"We do traditionally get a slowdown prior to a release," he said, adding that "Windows 8 is compelling. It could [help turn things around] but it will really depend on demand."

Patrick Moorhead, an analyst at Moor Insights & Strategy, isn't as optimistic about a revitalization of the PC business, noting that the biggest drag on the business hasn't been the imminent shipping of Windows 8, it's been the economy and tablets.

"Windows 8 will help PC sales some, but won't be enough to make up for the lousy economy," said Moorhead.

King said Windows 8 could even hurt PC sales.

"Windows 8 is so new and so radically different than previous versions of Windows that it could spark as much resistance as curiosity," he said.

On the other hand, he noted that some research has found that Windows 8's "touch enablement tops the wish lists of most PC users. If that proves right, Microsoft and its OEM partners should reap the benefits."

The already battered PC market had been depending earlier on a growth spurt in new, so-called ultrabook computers that did not materialise. Researcher IHS iSuppli reported earlier this month that worldwide ultrabook shipments had fallen far short of expectations. The company lowered its ultrabook sales forecast from 22 million units in 2012 to 10.3 million.
3 Comments
englishdaveh@gmail.com I'm sure the business community will lap Win8 up. They've been dabbling with iPads but lack the commitment to app development (shame as a pleasant surprise awaits those who do) and aversion to Apple's non-pandering stance to enterprise IT has held iPad back. iPad has therefore been a marketing tool for Surface which promises same-old-same-old with a splash of new touchy stuff to keep customers engaged and thinking they're on the leading edge. It'll be a hit.

There is no longer any place for a 1980s GUI with a worse-than-Android touch layer in the consumer space. Windows PCs were always hobbyist machines anyway, consumers never really got them hence they boot up and launch the browser straight away.
Posted by McD at 12:51:49 on October 31, 2012

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baaa ha ha isheep sheep?
Posted by Anonymous at 22:13:37 on October 29, 2012

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I Think its too early to tell I don't think this is about kickstarting the pc market but really more about re-defining it. The next 6 months will likely be slow progress, but once there is a transient platform, microsoft can quickly transition between any device it likes. So far it is making 1 interface standard across several devices ie, phone, table, console, pc and touch pc. That's a pretty big achievement. The reason its a big achievement comes simply down to the fact that, it doesn't matter if the pc market is bad now, because now the pc market can transition to being a tablet or home media setup or anything it really wants.... its not bound by the simple fact that windows is just for a desktop or laptop.

Doomsayers and naysayers , its a little to early to call the shots....
Posted by Fireacer at 11:23:19 on October 29, 2012

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