
"Acer, the Taiwanese computer maker that's suffered two consecutive annual losses,
posted strong sales of notebooks using Google's Chrome platform after the release of Microsoft's Windows 8 failed to ignite the market. Chrome-based models accounted for 5 percent to 10 percent of Acer's U.S. shipments since being released there in November, President Jim Wong said in an interview at the Taipei-based company's headquarters. That ratio is expected to be sustainable in the long term and the company is considering offering Chrome models in other developed markets, he said." HP is
also planning a Chrome OS laptop, and it's been at the top of Amazon's charts (whatever that means) for a while now. In case you haven't noticed - the desktop world, too, is changing. Nobody
wants Windows 8 (touch or no), so OEMs are
finally looking elsewhere. We're finally getting what we wanted 13 years ago.
Member since:
2007-03-26
It helps you getting your data from everywhere, and to everyone _you_ want to give it.
True. I do run some services myself (eg Subsonic, my own hosting photo gallery, etc).
Even then though, I still dislike OSs that push processing away from native binary clients. eg webmail is great - possibly the best example of the 'cloud' in fact - but I still want a binary client that I can run locally. If just in case of emergencies (loss of internet, backing up stuff from the cloud, etc)
Edited 2013-01-29 09:32 UTC