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Netbook Pioneer Asustek Enters the iPad Age Asustek is introducing tablets in response towards the Apple blockbuster but nevertheless sees a long term for netbooks. Up to now, investors are not convinced
By
Bruce Einhorn and
Tim Culpan
(Corrects the spelling of Asustek from the headline)
Very small personal computers have been great to Asustek. The Taiwanese organization in 2007 launched the primary netbook, individuals low-priced mini-laptops which were the Pc industry's fastest-growing product for the past two years. Netbooks now represent virtually forty percent with the Asus brand's income and also have been the primary issue in supporting Asustek tie Lenovo as the world's No. 5 portable Pc firm, in accordance to researcher Worldwide Information Corp.
Now it looks much like the netbook growth engine is dropping steam. Netbooks' share of the international Computer marketplace will probably be flat this year at 12 percent, IDC estimates. Rather, customers are flocking to tablets such as Apple's (AAPL) iPad, which supply a lot of the benefits of netbooks. For Asustek,
Office Enterprise 2007 Product Key, that means making an enormous push into tablets although trying to persuade companies and consumers that you will find even now strengths to netbooks.
On May possibly 31, Asustek unveiled its 1st weapons inside the battle towards the iPad: the Eee Pad as well as the Eee Tablet. Like Apple's system, the Eee Pad—available next winter—will have a touchscreen, an embedded keyboard,
Buy Office 2007, 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,
Buy Microsoft 2007 Office Professional Plus, to hit the marketplace 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 product sales and earnings development within the coming years," KGI Securities analyst Angela Hsiang wrote in a June 1 report.
Asustek will have plenty of competition, even aside from the iPad. Dell (DELL) has released a mini-tablet called the Streak, and almost every other Computer maker has a tablet inside the works, though some have delayed launches from the wake from the iPad. Even though the new Asus machines will hit stores before most of the competition,
Office 2010 Home And Student 32 Bit, traders clearly have doubts about Asustek's strategy. Its Taipei-listed shares dropped 18 percent this year through May possibly 17, when stock income were suspended pending the upcoming spinoff in the company's manufacturing arm. One investor worry is that Asustek can't supply as a lot of apps as Apple can. "They have a very great item but the environment is not ready; there's even now 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 industry 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 nevertheless provide a better user experience" than tablets, says Shen.
To hedge towards an enormous decline in netbook popularity, Asustek is heading upscale. In May well the company launched notebooks with Bang & Olufsen sound systems and introduced a line of laptops with bamboo on the lid,
Key Office 2007, using 20 percent less plastic than other machines. "We nevertheless have a lot of innovation going on," Chairman Jonney Shih says, 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 from 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, 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
.