Although only one netbook model is available, the Aspire One, the market share that Acer earned in this market segment in the third quarter of the year reached 38.3%. Meanwhile, fellow competitor Asus has only gained 30.3% market share, despite launching a series of models branded Eee PC with different screen sizes and configurations.
The Acer Aspire One alone beat the Asus Eee PC 'family' in the third quarter of 2008.Photo: Laptoping .
According to DisplaySearch, 2.15 million units of the Aspire One were sold by Acer in July, August and September, while the total Eee PC sales were only 1.7 million.
Behind two Taiwanese computer firms, HP with the Mini-Note 2133. In the third quarter of 2008, the world's largest PC manufacturer shipped 330,000 netbooks, accounting for 5.8% of the market. Ranked respectively in 4th and 5th positions are MSI (with 5.7% market share) and Dell (2.8%). MSI sold 320,000 Wind units, while there were 160,000 Dell Mini 9s sold.
Due to the new netbook market, the sales of two other major manufacturers, Lenovo and Toshiba, are still modest. Lenovo has only sold 40,000 IdeaPad S9 and S10, while Toshiba has only sold 30,000 NB100 units.
In total, there were 5.61 million netbooks sold worldwide in the third quarter of 2008, an increase of 160% compared to the second quarter. DisplaySearch predicts that the total number of netbooks shipped this year may reach 14 million.
based on the netbook design, asus introduced at computex in taiwan two new transformer pad members own a 10.1-inch screen, running android and an intel atom bay trail.
the media said that in the context of the tablet computer is increasingly becoming a strong trend in the market, asus has decided to death of the line of small, cheap laptops (eee pc netbook) of they.
there is a netbook design and configuration, but the asus n10 comes with a graphics card and some large laptop expansion ports. however, speed has not yet improved.
the domestic market has more than 10 types of netbooks priced at under vnd 6 million, meeting the needs of low-income consumers and jobs that require frequent travel ...
samsung, dell, hp and asus announced that netbook 'death', acer and msi are not planning this product either ... these moves show that many tech companies have said 'break up' to netbook.
netbook configurations on the market today are usually similar, so manufacturers are looking to reduce prices or increase battery life and screen resolution to compete.