Linked by Thom Holwerda on Tue 18th Sep 2012 16:26 UTC
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Member since:
2007-03-30
these are new and low volume products. they'll charge whatever they can get for them, but lets look at the historical precedent: netbooks.
given that these atom convertibles are netbook hardware with some extra features, the prices should look higher than a premium netbook today, or like an early expensive netbook.
good netbooks were $500 in 2008, and are about that price now. that looked like a lot compared to a full laptop which had more of everything and cost the same price.
the atom netbook in that slide is $1000. that's a lot. if competition drives it down to $750 before the next product cycle, that might make some sense. 50% premium for convertible convenience and touch screen features.
even the arm netbook there seems expensive. $800 for what people might see as a big nexus 7 ($200) with a keyboard and a broken windows. but for comparison, asus can get $600+ for their TF700T which is probably the same hardware. so how much is the broken windows rt license with faux-office worth to anybody. $100-$200? asus thinks so.
I for one am most interested in the "yoga"/"tai-chi" flippable form factor. if a manufacturer can make this work, it might be considered superior to the detachable monitor method, which seems unnatural compared to flipping the screen around. I might find a use for an ultrabook that flips backwards to become a tablet.