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Netbook Pioneer Asustek Enters the iPad Age Asustek is introducing tablets in response for the Apple blockbuster but still sees a foreseeable future for netbooks. Thus far, traders are not convinced
By
Bruce Einhorn and
Tim Culpan
(Corrects the spelling of Asustek in the headline)
Small computer systems have been excellent to Asustek. The Taiwanese company in 2007 introduced the primary netbook,
Microsoft Office 2007 Enterprise Product Key, individuals low-priced mini-laptops which have been the Personal computer industry's fastest-growing item for your past two a long time. Netbooks now represent virtually forty % from the Asus brand's product sales and have been the key aspect in helping Asustek tie Lenovo since the world's No. five moveable Pc firm, in accordance to researcher International Data Corp.
Now it seems to be like the netbook expansion engine is losing steam. Netbooks' reveal with the global Personal computer market will most likely be flat this 12 months at 12 percent,
Windows 7 Professional X86 Key, IDC estimates. Rather, consumers are flocking to tablets including Apple's (AAPL) iPad, which offer a lot of the advantages of netbooks. For Asustek, meaning creating a large push into tablets even though attempting to convince companies and buyers that you can find nevertheless advantages to netbooks.
On Might 31, Asustek unveiled its first weapons within the battle versus the iPad: the Eee Pad along with the Eee Tablet. Like Apple's device, the Eee Pad—available next winter—will have a touchscreen, an embedded keyboard, and videoconferencing capability. Unlike the iPad, the Asus machine will sport an Intel (INTC) processor and use the
Windows 7 operating system. The Eee Tablet, to hit the industry in early 2011, is an electronic book reader with a touchscreen and built-in camera that allows users to write notes on photos. The new gadgets could be "key drivers for Asustek's revenue and earnings development within the coming many years," KGI Securities analyst Angela Hsiang wrote in a June 1 report.
Asustek will have plenty of competition,
Cheap Office 2010 64 Bit, even aside from the iPad. Dell (DELL) has introduced a mini-tablet called the Streak, and almost every other Pc maker has a tablet inside the works, though some have delayed launches in the wake of the iPad. Whilst the new Asus machines will hit stores before most of the competition, traders clearly have doubts about Asustek's strategy. Its Taipei-listed shares dropped 18 percent this year through Might 17, when stock product sales were suspended pending the upcoming spinoff of the company's manufacturing arm. One investor worry is that Asustek can't give as many apps as Apple can. "They have a very good item but the environment is not ready; there's still not enough content," says Robert Cheng, an analyst in Taipei with Credit Suisse (CS). Another problem is that the Eee Pad will have about six hours of battery life, four hours less than the iPad.
Asustek CEO Jerry Shen believes he nonetheless can tap a vast corporate market for netbooks. The business is tinkering with design, moving away from the current clamshell look to sleeker one-piece models—a kind of tablet shape but with a physical keyboard. Asustek "will have a lot of different types of netbooks that can even now provide a better user experience" than tablets, says Shen.
To hedge versus an enormous decline in netbook popularity, Asustek is heading upscale. In Might the organization launched notebooks with Bang & Olufsen sound systems and released a line of laptops with bamboo on the lid, using 20 % less plastic than other machines. "We nevertheless have a lot of innovation going on," Chairman Jonney Shih says,
Office 2007, showing off the private lab adjacent to his office where he retreats to clear his mind by tinkering with Asus gadgets.
One of Asustek's most offbeat innovations is its product-testing strategy. A Buddhist vegetarian, Shih is a supporter in the Tzu Chi Foundation, one of Taiwan's biggest Buddhist charities. He enlisted Venerable Dharma Master Cheng Yen, the foundation's 73-year-old founder, to help test e-readers. Cheng Yen "is the best quality assurance," Shih says. "She is so patient." As Asustek tries to match the iPad,
Office 2010 Standard Key, he'll need patience from customers, too.
The bottom line: Asustek is working on new tablets as income of its mainstay machines, tiny netbooks, begin to flatten.
Einhorn is Asia regional editor in Bloomberg Businessweek's Hong Kong bureau.
Culpan is a reporter for Bloomberg News
.