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Lenovo unveils latest LePad - People's Daily Online January 06, 2011
Lenovo, China's largest computer technology corporation, Wednesday promoted its LePad tablet on several large IT portals. This came just prior to its debut at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in the US Thursday where it will be competing with 80 tablet launches including Apple iPad.
According to Computerworld, last year, at the CES Lenovo won praise for its IdeaPad U1 Hybrid tablet laptop. Now Lenovo has announced the IdeaPad U1 hybrid that adds the LePad tablet to form a complete laptop.
LePad's 1.3GHz Qualcoom Snapdragon with Android operating system will be around $399-plus, according to tech. sina.com.
Calls to Lenovo were not returned.
Some well-known brands including HP and Toshiba will be pushing their tablets at the CES, Reuters reported.
"There will be a plethora of tablet launches at CES. I would not be surprised to see 60 to 80 tablet launches," Shawn DuBravac, chief economist at the Consumer Electronics Association, the organization that runs the high-voltage trade show, was quoted by CBC News as saying.
Industry watcher said PC tycoons including Lenovo competed to grab the tablet market partly because of the relative lower cost of their operating systems and computer chips.
"The media tablets of various brands have diversified choices of operating systems including Apple's iOS and google's An-droid, and more types of computer chips, that will break Intel Corp and Microsoft's stranglehold on PCs and consequently lead to lower costs," He Lin, an analyst with Gartner Inc, an information technology research consultancy, told the Global Times Wednesday.
Intel makes eight out of 10 microprocessors in the global market.
Microsoft will also unveil a new tablet computer soon, Reuters quoted sources as saying.
Gartner's He said LePad has its advantages in the domestic media tablet market since consumers, especially in tier-two and tier-three cities, are much more familiar with the Lenovo brand.
"The LePad has huge market potential domestically since children and elderly people will like the touch screen experi-ence," He said.
But "Lenovo will face serious competition overseas since consumers are still less familiar with its brand," He said.
The boom of tablets will also bring a raft of business opportunities for more domestic IT companies including display screens makers and tablet-related software designers, said He.
Domestic sales volume for tablet PCs this year is expected to total 4.5 million, according to Analysys International, an Internet based consultancy. And with an estimated 19.5 million units sold worldwide last year and about 54.80 million predicted to be sold in 2011, media tablets will be one of the hottest electronics trends this year, according to a report by Gartner.
Source: Global Times
Lenovo, China's largest computer technology corporation, Wednesday promoted its LePad tablet on several large IT portals. This came just prior to its debut at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in the US Thursday where it will be competing with 80 tablet launches including Apple iPad.
According to Computerworld, last year, at the CES Lenovo won praise for its IdeaPad U1 Hybrid tablet laptop. Now Lenovo has announced the IdeaPad U1 hybrid that adds the LePad tablet to form a complete laptop.
LePad's 1.3GHz Qualcoom Snapdragon with Android operating system will be around $399-plus, according to tech. sina.com.
Calls to Lenovo were not returned.
Some well-known brands including HP and Toshiba will be pushing their tablets at the CES, Reuters reported.
"There will be a plethora of tablet launches at CES. I would not be surprised to see 60 to 80 tablet launches," Shawn DuBravac, chief economist at the Consumer Electronics Association, the organization that runs the high-voltage trade show, was quoted by CBC News as saying.
Industry watcher said PC tycoons including Lenovo competed to grab the tablet market partly because of the relative lower cost of their operating systems and computer chips.
"The media tablets of various brands have diversified choices of operating systems including Apple's iOS and google's An-droid, and more types of computer chips, that will break Intel Corp and Microsoft's stranglehold on PCs and consequently lead to lower costs," He Lin, an analyst with Gartner Inc, an information technology research consultancy, told the Global Times Wednesday.
Intel makes eight out of 10 microprocessors in the global market.
Microsoft will also unveil a new tablet computer soon, Reuters quoted sources as saying.
Gartner's He said LePad has its advantages in the domestic media tablet market since consumers, especially in tier-two and tier-three cities, are much more familiar with the Lenovo brand.
"The LePad has huge market potential domestically since children and elderly people will like the touch screen experi-ence," He said.
But "Lenovo will face serious competition overseas since consumers are still less familiar with its brand," He said.
The boom of tablets will also bring a raft of business opportunities for more domestic IT companies including display screens makers and tablet-related software designers, said He.
Domestic sales volume for tablet PCs this year is expected to total 4.5 million, according to Analysys International, an Internet based consultancy. And with an estimated 19.5 million units sold worldwide last year and about 54.80 million predicted to be sold in 2011, media tablets will be one of the hottest electronics trends this year, according to a report by Gartner.
Source: Global Times