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Stats Show No Sign of PC Comeback

Hamartia Antidote

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http://www.pcmag.com/news/348627/stats-show-no-sign-of-pc-comeback


Global personal computer shipments declined for the eighth consecutive quarter, marking the longest downturn in PC history.

Worldwide sales totaled 68.9 million units in the third quarter of 2016—a 5.7 percent drop from the same time last year, according to Gartner. The research firm cited manufacturers' "many challenges," including weak back-to-school demand and lessening appeal among the consumer market, especially in emerging areas.

"There are two fundamental issues that have impacted PC market results: the extension of the lifetime of the PC caused by the excess of consumer devices, and weak PC consumer demand in emerging markets," Mikako Kitagawa, principal Gartner analyst, said in a statement.

Most people own and use at least three different types of devices, she continued, adding that "the PC is not a high priority device for the majority of consumers, so they do not feel the need to upgrade … as often as they used to.

"Some may never decide to upgrade to a PC again," Kitagawa said.

For now, Lenovo is the top PC maker with 20.9 percent of the market, followed closely by HP with 20.4 percent; Dell pulls up the rear with 14.7 percent. But while Lenovo is in the midst of a six-quarter slump, HP and Dell have recorded shipment growth since Q2. Rounding out the top five are Asus (7.8 percent), Apple (7.2 percent), and Acer (6.7 percent). Gartner's data covers desktops, laptops, and ultra-mobile (Microsoft Surface) PCs; Chromebooks and iPads were not considered.


And while mobile PCs—notebooks, 2-in-1s, Windows tablets—showed single-digit year-over-year growth, the overall results were marred by a decline in desktop shipments, according to Kitagawa.

In the US, PC shipments totaled 16.2 million units in the third quarter—a 0.3 percent decline from the same period last year. "With so many PCs already in the consumer market, US consumers do not feel the need to buy new PCs; many parents hand down old PCs to their kids," Kitagawa said.

The US did, however, see an uptick in Q2 shipments, according to July reports, which tipped the country's growth at almost 5 percent, according to IDC; Gartner suggested a more conservative, but still positive, 1.4 percent.
 
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I've been seeing reports that PC sales are in decline, however, I think it is not a full picture. While complete, off the shelf PC systems might not be selling as they used to, PC components are selling like mad with Intel, AMD and Nvidia all reporting increasing profits from their desktop products sales.
I think it is due to an increase in consumer awareness about assembling their own machines according to their own needs. This way they are able to get a custom PC that is suitable to their own requirements and at a lower cost as well. Intel profits:
MWSnap0098.jpg

source
Nvidia profits:
NVIDIA GeForce GTX and PC Gaming Revenue Grew by 44% in FY 2016 As Green Team Reports Record Revenue For Q3 of $1.305 Billion
AMD profits:
AMD claws back some discrete-GPU market share
 
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PC is still there.
It has a say in peoples life now.
And branded Comptuers are just priced absuredly that one can simply make a 50% better PC for the same price.

Just because its declining in sale doesnt mean people have stopped using the computer.
Want to up the sales? You'd need new people to buy PC every day then. :D
 
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PC is still there.
It has a say in peoples life now.
And branded Comptuers are just priced absuredly that one can simply make a 50% better PC for the same price.

Just because its declining in sale doesnt mean people have stopped using the computer.
Want to up the sales? You'd need new people to buy PC every day then. :D

Well that was the crux of the issue. It used to be people would upgrade their machines every few years due to a significant speed increase. However these days everybody isn't rushing out to get a new PC when Intel or AMD announces a new chip. I mean when was the last time you said "Whoohoo!!" over some new CPU? People get way more excited about phones (although that is waning too)
 
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