Once upon a time, the desktop PC reigned. Then came the notebook. Then, tablets
came along and wiped the floor with both the desktop and the notebook, and sent
the entire PC industry into a freefalling tailspin. But could the reign of the
tablet be a short-lived one? Could hybrid systems be waiting in the wings to
give tablets a taste of their own medicine?
According to an AMD
executive, new
tablets such as Apple's iPad and Google's Nexus could be sidelined
by hybrid systems in "two to three years".Speaking to T3, AMD's UK retail
business development manager Andrew Muscat predicts a changing of the
tides.
"You're going to see a shift, I think, while tablets are good,
you're still restricted when it comes to content creation; there's always going
to be a need for notebooks," said Muscat."I think it's moving a lot more towards
taking tablet technology and effectively turning it into notebook
technology."
At the core of this shift, predicts Muscat, is a shift from
using local processing power that comes in the form of the CPU or GPU to cloud
computing."If you look at newest
tablets, it's pretty much all evolving around the cloud; the cloud
is driving this massively. I think that's where mobile (and when I say mobile, I
mean notebook, tablet) is going."
While both AMD and Intel seem to have
faith that hybrids will, to some measure, reinvigorate the PC industry, this
feeling is not shared by the wider industry. PC OEMs, some already feeling
burned by poor netbook and tablet sales, are increasingly reluctant to pin their
hopes — not to mention research and development dollars — on a new PC form
factor.dfsWF2FR
Another important factor to bear in mind is that hybrids
are nothing new. Asus, for example, has had a hybrid on the market in the form
of the latest
tablets Transformer for quite some time now, and that has hardly
rocked the world. Just adding Windows 8 into the mix — an operating system that
has had, at best, a mixed reception — is hardly likely to improve
things.
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