How much are smartphones and weePC’s are eating PC demand?

by Kris_Tuttle on November 19, 2008

The recent excite­ment over small carry-along com­put­ers has been fairly high.  These small, fairly cheap ($300 to $400) machines have been emerg­ing as a cat­e­gory.  Asus got things started with the eePC and now main­stream com­pa­nies like Dell have their own mod­els.  We noted that they obvi­ously carry smaller gross and net dol­lars for the indus­try than full fledged note­books but they didn’t rep­re­sent that many units.

But then we added the reces­sion and data out of sev­eral research firms show­ing a rather dras­tic decline in expected IT spend­ing in the cur­rent quar­ter (bud­get flush gets flushed?) and in Q1 of 2009.  That’s not much of a surprise.

At the same time we were sur­prised to see rel­a­tively strong con­tin­u­ing plans on the pur­chase of smart­phones. In par­tic­u­lar the Black­berry and the iPhone are look­ing like busi­ness adop­tion will remain brisk.  Is it coin­ci­dence or is there some relationship?

Obvi­ously Cloud Com­put­ing will ulti­mately mean less pro­cess­ing power needed in stand-alone con­fig­u­ra­tions as only the basic UI and net­work con­nec­tions will be really needed for many basic func­tions.  Unless somone is actively cre­at­ing pre­sen­ta­tions, doc­u­ments or con­tent, it’s now pos­si­ble to do most things on a smartphone. 

It’s more than email.  Web brows­ing, social net­work­ing, even stock trad­ing appli­ca­tions are well estab­lished.  The wave of new appli­ca­tions com­ing for the iPhone and Black­berry are such that more and more peo­ple will leave their lap­tops at home.  Espe­cially for short trips.

Like many things this is pretty “obvi­ous” and we wrote about the trend three times already this year in our Mobile Inter­net seg­ment.  How­ever the stock mar­ket has pun­ished every name on our list.

These emerg­ing data points increase our con­vic­tion on core names like Apple and Google.  We’re in no rush to buy any­thing in this mar­ket but as the year turns over we will be adding to posi­tions in these names.  The data con­tin­ues to sug­gest these firms are get­ting stronger, not weaker as we work through the recession. 

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