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Previous Blogs

October 21, 2016
Tesla Hardware Upgrade to Enable More Autonomous Cars

October 18, 2016
Can IT Survive?

October 14, 2016
Sony PlayStation VR Brings Virtual Reality to the Masses

October 11, 2016
Galaxy Note 7: The Death of a Smartphone

October 4, 2016
Service Providers Still Act Like Utilities

September 30, 2016
Google Updates Their Cloud Offerings

September 27, 2016
The Andromeda Strain

September 13, 2016
Apple's Missed Audio Opportunity

September 9, 2016
Traditional IT Companies Announce Major Changes: Dell, HP Enterprise, Intel

September 6, 2016
Rethinking Smart Home Gateways

August 30, 2016
Ridesharing Impact Dramatically Overstated

August 23, 2016
Consumer Interest in Auto Tech? Slower Than You Think

August 19, 2016
Intel Focuses on Automotive

August 16, 2016
The Utility of Cloud Computing

August 12, 2016
Intel Purchases AI Chip Vendor

August 9, 2016
The Digital Identity Dilemma

August 2, 2016
IoT Strategies Going Vertical

July 29, 2016
Yahoo-Verizon Deal

July 26, 2016
Creating New Worlds

July 19, 2016
The State of Smart Homes

July 15, 2016
US PC Market Shows Improvement

July 12, 2016
Pokemon Go is an AR Watershed

July 5, 2016
Car Wars: The Battle for Automotive Tech

July 1, 2016
Microsoft Announces Windows 10 Anniversary Update

June 28, 2016
Digital Audio Progress Highlights Tech’s More Human Future

June 24, 2016
HP Inc. Offers Thinnest Notebook

June 21, 2016
IoT Faces Challenges with Scale

June 17, 2016
Snapchat Opens Up New Options for Marketers

June 14, 2016
Apple Drives Apps into Services

June 7, 2016
The Evolution of Cloud Computing

May 31, 2016
Voice-Based Computing with Digital Assistants

May 24, 2016
Turning Makers into Manufacturers

May 20, 2016
Google Brings Android Apps to Chrome

May 17, 2016
Virtual Reality Brings New Life…to Desktops?

May 10, 2016
The Biggest Question for IoT…Who Pays?

May 3, 2016
Learning About Deep Learning

April 26, 2016
The End of Hardware?

April 19, 2016
Enterprise IoT Drives Indirect Savings

April 12, 2016
TidBits About Bots

April 5, 2016
VR in the Cloud

March 29, 2016
IOT Will Drive Tech Outside of IT

March 22, 2016
Apple Moves to Middle Age

March 15, 2016
The Invisible Platform

March 8, 2016
Bringing Makers to Business

March 1, 2016
IOT Coming Into Focus

February 23, 2016
The Devices Formerly Known as Smartphones

February 16, 2016
Can Web Music Survive?

February 9, 2016
The Growing Choices in Wireless Connectivity

February 2, 2016
What if Twitter Died?

January 26, 2016
Smart Home Safety Evolution: Physical to Digital

January 19, 2016
The Promise and Confusion of USB Type-C

January 12, 2016
The Hottest Computing Device? Cars

January 5, 2016
Top Tech Predictions for 2016, Part 2

December 30, 2015
Top Tech Predictions for 2016, Part 1

2015 Blogs

2014 Blogs


2013 Blogs

















TECHnalysis Research Blog

October 25, 2016
The Indefatigable PC

By Bob O'Donnell

By all rights, it should be dead by now. I mean, really. A market based on a tech product that first came to market over 35 years go?

And yet, here we stand in the waning days of October 2016 and the biggest news expected to come out of the tech industry this week are PC announcements from two of the largest companies in the world: Apple and Microsoft. It’s like we’re in some kind of a weird time warp. (Of course, the Cubs are poised to win their first World Series in over 100 years, so who knows?)

The development must be particularly surprising to those who bought into the whole “PC is dead” school of thought. According to the proselytizers of this movement, tablets should have clearly taken over the world by now. But that sure didn’t happen. While PC shipments have certainly taken their lumps, tablets never reached anything close to PCs from a shipments perspective. In fact, tablet shipments have now been declining for over 3 years.

After tablets, smartwatches were supposed to be the next generation personal computing device. Recent shipment data from IDC, however, suggests that smartwatches are in for an even worse fate than tablets. A little more than a year-and-a-half after being widely introduced to the market, smartwatch shipments are tanking. Not exactly a good sign for what was supposed to be the “next big thing.”

Of course, PCs continue to face their challenges as well, particularly consumer PCs. After peaking in Q4 of 2011, worldwide PC shipments have been on a slow steady decline ever since. Interestingly, however, US PC shipments have actually turned around recently and are now on a modestly increasing growth curve.

The reason for this is that PCs have continued to prove their usefulness and value to a wide range of people, especially in business environments. PCs are certainly not the only computing device that people are using anymore, but for many, PCs remain the go-to productivity device and for others, they still play an important role.

To put it simply, there’s just something to be said for the large-screen computing experience that only PCs can truly provide. More importantly, it’s not clear to me that there’s anything poised to truly replace that experience in the near term.

Another big reason for the PC’s longevity is that it has been on a path of constant and relatively consistent evolution since its earliest days. Driven in part by the semiconductor manufacturing advances enabled by Moore’s Law, a great deal of credit also needs to be given to chip designers at Intel, AMD and nVidia, among others, who have created incredibly powerful devices. Similarly, OS and application software advances by Apple, Microsoft and many others have created environments that over a billion people are able to use to work, play and communicate with on a daily basis.

There have also been impressive improvements in the physical designs of PCs. After a few false starts at delivering thin-and-light notebooks, for example, the super-slim ultrabook offerings from the likes of Dell (XPS13), HP (Spectre X360) and Lenovo (ThinkPad X1) have caught up to and arguably even surpassed Apple’s still-impressive MacBook Air. At the same time, to the surprise of many, Microsoft’s Surface has successfully spawned a whole new array of 2-in-1 and convertible PC designs that has brought new life to the PC market as well. It’s easy to take for granted now, but you can finally get the combination of performance, weight, size and battery life that many have always wanted in a PC.

Frankly, PCs have actually never been stronger or more attractive tech devices—it’s more like a personal computer renaissance than a personal computer extinction. The fact that we’ll likely be talking about the latest additions to this market later this week says a great deal about the role that PCs still have to play.

Here's a link to the column: https://techpinions.com/the-indefatigable-pc/47623

Bob O’Donnell is the president and chief analyst of TECHnalysis Research, LLC a market research firm that provides strategic consulting and market research services to the technology industry and professional financial community. You can follow him on Twitter @bobodtech.

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