Linked by Thom Holwerda on Wed 18th Feb 2009 14:36 UTC
Thread beginning with comment 349680
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People are buying these machines, but for what purpose? Some people use them to take notes, some use them to browse the web, some buy them because they are new and shiny. The netbook devices are going through an identity crisis. They are useful devices, but there is no market yet where someone would say "a netbook would be better than a laptop for this task, I need a netbook."
I disagree with you on this point. I want a small laptop that weights under 1kg for a reasonnable price and there is no laptop over there to do the job.
However I'm OK to say that most of the people buy netbooks because they are cheap and enough for their needs, not because they need a netbook instead of a laptop.
But it's not my case, as for others. I want a netbook, not a laptop: something small and light above all.




Member since:
2008-10-30
A lot of people view Apple as "another computer company" and this is wrong. Apple never intended to be a generic computer company, they set their goals much higher. When goals and standards are high, quality is usually high. This is partly the reason Apple has developed a "cult following."
What they produce, they produce with very high quality, creativity, and artistic appeal. Their products are as attractive as they are functional. Because of this, it makes sense that Apple doesn't want to rush into the "netbook market."
This "netbook market" isn't really a market at all. People are buying these machines, but for what purpose? Some people use them to take notes, some use them to browse the web, some buy them because they are new and shiny. The netbook devices are going through an identity crisis. They are useful devices, but there is no market yet where someone would say "a netbook would be better than a laptop for this task, I need a netbook."
As it stands today, the netbook market consists of cheap (well, cheapish) "throw-away" devices that can replace some functionality of a laptop, but not all. Until there is a real market for these devices where people actually need them, I don't see Apple producing a "netbook."
Don't believe me? When did Apple successfully introduce an mp3 player? A phone?
Edited 2009-02-18 17:36 UTC