Skip to main content

New Media Tablet and Netbook PC Coexistence

In February, 2009, ABI Research forecast that approximately 35 million netbook PCs would ship into world markets that year. Some viewed that estimate as unrealistically high. However, the final 2009 shipment total reached 36.3 million netbook devices. The upside potential for netbooks this year is equally positive.

In 2010, netbook shipments are expected to reach 58 million while a new element has been added to the mobile consumer electronics market equation -- the media tablet, initially personified by the affordable Amazon Kindle and now the Apple iPad.

How will mobile CE markets react to a new device, so soon after the start of the netbook phenomenon?

"We expect the netbook market to fragment according to different regional value propositions," says principal analyst Jeff Orr.

Functionality will be added to mainstream netbook products while at the same time an entry-level netbook solution will grow, with the aim of targeting some large emerging markets (including China and India ) where PC penetration is still quite low.

At the same time, ABI sees the pace of netbook market growth slowing to a CAGR of 23 percent, as media tablets start to steal some netbook market share. Their latest market study conservatively forecasts media tablet sales of about eight million in 2010.

"Apple's claimed shipments of one million iPads in the first month are impressive starting from zero," says Orr, "but even our total media tablet forecast falls far short of what anyone would call mass market adoption."

While it was understood that Apple could put together a good consumer solution and take significant early market share, there are lots of opportunities for others -- it's a question of how they come to market: solo, as Apple has done, or in conjunction with mobile network operator and retail distribution partners.

Popular posts from this blog

AI Supercycle: Server Market Growth Surge

The worldwide server market has entered a new phase defined almost entirely by artificial intelligence (AI) infrastructure economics rather than traditional enterprise refresh cycles.   The latest market data shows robust growth and a structural shift in where value is created, who captures it, and which architectures are setting the pace for the next decade. IDC reports that worldwide server revenue reached a record $112.4 billion in the third quarter of 2025, representing a striking 61 percent year-over-year increase compared to the same quarter in 2024. For context, this means the market is adding tens of billions of dollars in incremental quarterly spend, driven overwhelmingly by AI and accelerated computing requirements.  IT Server Market Development Over the first three quarters of 2025, server revenue has already reached $314.2 billion, meaning the market has nearly doubled in size compared to 2024, underscoring how AI buildouts have compressed several years of exp...