Technalysis Research
 
Previous USAToday Columns

December 18, 2020
New job search: Tech companies tackle shifting jobs environment with reskilling efforts

2020 USAToday Columns

2019 USAToday Columns

2018 USAToday Columns

2017 USAToday Columns

2016 USAToday Columns

2015 USAToday Columns

2014 USAToday Columns

















USAToday Column


January 14, 2021
It's a good time for PC users: 2021 innovations include fast pivot to 5G

By Bob O'Donnell

While it has been a challenging week on the general news front, but for those interested in the PC business, it's been an incredible one.

While the overall amount of detailed product news from this year's CES show is lower in most categories than in years past, the PC-related introductions have been coming out at a torrential pace – likely due to the category's recent success.

On top of that, several impressive debuts from big PC chip suppliers like AMD, Intel, and Nvidia mean significantly faster and more power efficient machines are on the near horizon. Finally, to put the cherry on top of it all, we've started to see the PC industry really embrace 5G as a critical new technology for its latest laptops. To put it succinctly, it's a good time for PCs.

Hardware changes

From a device perspective, things officially kicked off last week with launches designed both for business and work-from-home situations, as well as consumer-focused applications, such as gaming, learn-from-home, and more.

First up was Dell's introduction of several new business-focused Latitude notebooks, including the Intel 11th generation Core CPU-powered 9420 and 9520, both of which offer optional 5G support.

Samsung debuted the second edition of its Intel-powered Galaxy Chromebook 2, which, at $549, is roughly just half the price of the version it first brought out last year.

Microsoft also surprised many with an updated version of its Surface, dubbed the Surface Pro 7 Plus, featuring removable SSD storage, which doesn't offer 5G, but is the first Intel-powered Surface Pro to offer LTE connections in nearly four years.

5G comes to your lap(top)

Both Lenovo and HP debuted ultra-thin and lightweight 5G-equipped laptops at the show, along with a huge number of other 5G-capable designs. In fact, during the AMD keynote delivered by CEO Dr.

Lisa Su, Lenovo's chairman Yang Yuanqing made a point to emphasize the company's commitment to bringing 5G to a majority of its product lineup this year. A recent example is their ThinkPad X1 Titanium Yoga, which at just 11 mm in depth, is the thinnest ThinkPad the company has ever introduced.

The newest lightweight, 5G-capable offerings from HP are the expanded Dragonfly series, including the Elite Dragonfly G2 and the Elite Dragonfly MAX, which offers a 5MP webcam and extra microphones for improved performance during video calls.

The desk experience looks bigger, brighter

In addition to PCs, several vendors offered some enticing new large-screen monitors. As many of us who are working/learning/gaming at home have discovered, the benefits of big displays are as enormous as their sizes suggest.

Dell, for example, showed off a 5K x 2K resolution 40" curved monitor, as well as Microsoft Teams-certified 34", 27" and 24" models. HP, for its part, had 32", 27" and 24" borderless displays, as well as 27" and 24" models with integrated USB-C ports, making it easy to connect multiple peripherals.

On the component front, what's been fascinating to see is how the increased competitiveness of AMD, for both its CPU processors and GPU graphics chips, has triggered strong counter reactions from Intel on the CPU (and soon, GPU) side, and Nvidia on the GPU side. It's a textbook example of how strong competitors can move an industry forward at a rapid pace – best of all, it's something from which we can all benefit.

At its press conference, Intel introduced four new lines and 50 (!) different versions of its 11th generation Core mobile processors, including some targeted specifically for business, some for gaming and some for overall productivity in ultrathin designs.

In addition, the company unveiled its Evo vPro platform for enterprise PCs that combines the business-focused security benefits of vPro with the customer experience and system responsiveness-focused requirements of its new Evo-branded consumer PC platforms.

AMD answered with the debut of its new Ryzen 5000 series mobile CPUs, with over a dozen different varieties targeted toward high-performance applications (the H-Series) as well as thin ultramobile designs (the U-Series). In addition to faster performance, the company claimed the new chips could last up to 21 hours on a single charge for movie playback.

Gaming update

Finally, tapping into the tremendous interest in PC gaming, Nvidia unveiled both a new low-cost desktop GPU, called the GeForce RTX 3060 (priced at $329), and a new range of laptop-focused GPUs based on its latest Ampere architecture that the company is calling the GeForce RTX30 Series, all of which support its real-time ray-tracing technology.

All told, the CES announcements included an extensive range of new PC options, which clearly highlights how much activity and innovation continues to occur in PCs – a market that some had written off as nearly dead just a few years back. Add in the benefits of 5G connectivity, and it's clear there will be vibrant PC market for many years to come.

Here’s a link to the original column: https://www.usatoday.com/story/tech/columnist/2021/01/14/personal-computer-laptop-innovations-5-g/6649506002/

USA TODAY columnist Bob O'Donnell is the president and chief analyst of TECHnalysis Research, a market research and consulting firm that provides strategic consulting and market research services to the technology industry and professional financial community. His clients are major technology firms including Microsoft, HP, Dell, and Intel. You can follow him on Twitter @bobodtech.