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2007-11-05 09:27:21
By HIROKO TABUCHI, Associated Press WrierSun Nov 4, 4:28 PM ET
Masaya Igarashi wants $200 headphones for his new iPod Touch, and he's torn
between Nintendo Co.'s Wii and Sony's PlayStation 3 game consoles. When he has
saved up again, he plans to splurge on a digital camera or flat-screen TV.
There's one conspicuous omission from the college student's shopping list: a
new computer.
The PC's role in Japanese homes is diminishing, as its once-awesome monopoly on
processing power is encroached by gadgets such as smart phones that act like
pocket-size computers, advanced Internet-connected game consoles, and digital
video recorders with terabytes of memory.
"A new PC just isn't high on my priority list right now," said Igarashi, who
was shopping at a Bic Camera electronics shop in central Tokyo and said his
three-year-old desktop was "good for now."
"For the cost, I'd rather buy something else," he said.
Japan's PC market is already shrinking, leading analysts to wonder whether
Japan will become the first major market to see a decline in personal computer
use some 25 years after it revolutionized household electronics and whether
this could be the picture of things to come in other countries.
"The household PC market is losing momentum to other electronics like
flat-panel TVs and mobile phones," said Masahiro Katayama, research group head
at market survey firm IDC.
Overall PC shipments in Japan have fallen for five consecutive quarters, the
first ever drawn-out decline in PC sales in a key market, according to IDC. The
trend shows no signs of letting up: In the second quarter of 2007, desktops
fell 4.8 percent and laptops 3.1 percent.
NEC's and Sony's sales have been falling since 2006 in Japan. Hitachi Ltd. said
Oct. 22 it will pull out of the household computer business entirely in an
effort to refocus its sprawling operations.
"Consumers aren't impressed anymore with bigger hard drives or faster
processors. That's not as exciting as a bigger TV," Katayama said. "And in
Japan, kids now grow up using mobile phones, not PCs. The future of PCs isn't
bright."
PC makers beg to differ, and they're aggressively marketing their products in
the countries where they're seeing the most sales growth places where
residents have never had a PC. The industry is responding in two other ways:
reminding detractors that computers are still essential in linking the digital
universe and releasing several laptops priced below $300 this holiday shopping
season.
And, though Sales in the U.S. are slowing too, booming demand in the
industrializing world is expected to buoy worldwide PC shipments 11 percent to
an all-time high of 286 million in 2007. And, outside Japan, Asia is a key
growth area, with second-quarter sales jumping 21.9 percent this year.
Hitachi had already stopped making PCs for individual consumers since releasing
this year's summer models, although the Tokyo-based manufacturer will keep
making some computers for corporate clients. Personal computers already
accounted for less than 1 percent of Hitachi's annual sales.
It's clear why consumers are shunning PCs.
Millions download music directly to their mobiles, and many more use their
handsets for online shopping and to play games. Digital cameras connect
directly to printers and high-definition TVs for viewing photos, bypassing PCs
altogether. Movies now download straight to TVs.
More than 50 percent of Japanese send e-mail and browse the Internet from their
mobile phones, according to a 2006 survey by the Ministry of Internal Affairs.
The same survey found that 30 percent of people with e-mail on their phones
used PC-based e-mail less, including 4 percent who said they had stopped
sending e-mails from PCs completely.
The fastest growing social networking site here, Mobagay Town, is designed
exclusively for cell phones. Other networking sites like mixi, Facebook and
MySpace can all be accessed and updated from handsets, as can the video-sharing
site YouTube.
And while a lot of the decline is in household PCs, businesses are also waiting
longer to replace their computers partly because recent advances in PC
technology are only incremental, analysts say.
At a consumer electronics event in Tokyo in October, the mostly unpopular
stalls showcasing new PCs contrasted sharply with the crowded displays of
flat-panel TVs.
"There's no denying PCs are losing their spunk in Japanese consumers' eyes,"
said Hiroyuki Ishii, a sales official at Japan's top PC maker, NEC Corp. "There
seems to be less and less things only a PC can do," Ishii said. "The PC's value
will fade unless the PC can offer some breakthrough functions."
The slide has made PC manufacturers desperate to maintain their presence in
Japanese homes. Recent desktop PCs look more like audiovisual equipment or
even colorful art objects than computers.
Sony Corp.'s desktop computers have folded up to become clocks, and its latest
version even hangs on the wall. Laptops in a new Sony line are adorned with
illustrations from hip designers like ZAnPon. NEC is trying to make its PCs'
cooling fans quieter to address a common complaint from customers, it says.
Still, sluggish sales weigh on manufacturers.
NEC's annual PC shipments in Japan shrank 6.2 percent to 2.72 million units in
2006, though overall earnings have been buoyed by mobile phone and networking
solutions operations. The trend continued in the first quarter of fiscal 2007
then there was a 14 percent decline from a year earlier.
Sony's PC shipments for Japan shrank 10 percent in 2006 from a year earlier.
But it isn't about to throw in the towel yet.
"We feel we've reached a new stage in PC development, where consumers are
looking for user-friendly machines to complement other electronics," said
Hiroko Nakamura, a Sony official in Tokyo.
Sony's latest PCs, for example, come with a powerful program that can take
photos and video clips and automatically edit them into a slideshow set to
music.
Even Cupertino, Calif.-based Apple Inc., whose computer sales and market share
are surging in the U.S., has seen Macintosh unit sales in Japan slip 5 percent
year-on-year in the first nine months of 2007.
There are other reasons Japan is the first market to see PCs shrink, some
analysts say.
"We think of Japanese as workaholics, but many don't take work home," said
Damian Thong, a technology analyst at Macquarie Bank in Japan. "Once they leave
the office, they're often content with tapping e-mails or downloading music on
their phones," he said.
As Hitachi's shuttering of its household PC business demonstrates, making PCs
has become less attractive. IBM Corp. also left the PC business in 2005,
selling its computer unit to China's Lenovo Group Ltd.
But NEC's Ishii is persisting.
"We have to get the message out there that PCs are on top in terms of computing
power," he said. "They always will be."
Posted: 2007843@491.60
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stranger
I use PCs only, because I control the software that runs on it : Linux -
Debian.
That cheaper and less time consuming than buying lots of devices and trying
connect them.
All my data is centralized in my pc. Easy to access from anywhere, efficiently
backed up.
More applications than other devices : Transcode, web server, file server, ssh,
web site, automatic mailing ...