About Technology Industry

BNET Technology provides daily industry trends and news coverage with insights for managers and executives about all aspects of the high-tech industry. In addition to detailed tech company profiles, we bring you industry analysis on new mergers and acquisitions, tech products, investments, patents, and a host of other important technology related business issues.

PC Vendors Must Adapt Or Die

By Michael Hickins | Mar 26, 2009

Dell, HP, Lenovo and other hardware vendors could be looking at the end of their PC businesses within four years, as enterprises start implementing a more network-based approach to delivering computing power and applications.

The threat comes from a technology known as hosted virtual desktops, based on software and networking tools that allow all the data that currently resides within a PC to be served up from the data center. If this all sounds vaguely familiar, that’s because it’s an updated version of the thin-client revolution that failed to deliver on the same promise over a decade ago because end users found it took too long for data and applications to make the round trip from servers to their desktops, assuming the network hadn’t crashed. This time around, the argument goes, the technology features more advanced software and networking capabilities that should overcome the slow reaction times and network outages that plagued the earlier generation.

The appeal to customers is the same as ever, which is the promise of less expensive desktops along with lower ancillary costs associated with fitting out PCs with software and then maintaining them in working order. So appealing are these cost savings that the Gartner consulting firm believes hosted virtual desktops, currently less than one percent of all professional desktops deployed, will represent a whopping 40% of the market by 2013, representing more than $65 billion in revenues.

The hardware vendors will still have a market for a greatly scaled-down version of the PC, but the hardware will be more commoditized than ever, and generate negligible margins. The only thing vendors can hang hat their hats on will be selling more servers. But to do that, they will have to sell servers that are fully equipped with software and networking tools supporting the ability to host virtual desktops, and manage network sessions and the provisioning of virtual desktops.

Gartner analyst Annette Jump told me that as the hardware and software has to work together more intimately than ever, the hardware vendors will have to provide a complete offering, rather than just bits and pieces. Otherwise, they’ll find themselves relegated to selling empty shells to the likes of VMware, the current market leader for desktop virtualization, Citrix, Microsoft, Parallels, and Red Hat, for very meager earnings indeed.

Michael Hickins is a professional writer and journalist with a passion for ferreting out the intersections between technology and culture.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
  • Lenovo Expects More PC industry Consolidation

    eWeek - 349 days 10 hours 21 minutes ago

    SHANGHAI (Reuters) - Lenovo Group, the world's No. 4 personal computer maker, expects more consolidation in the PC industry in the current downturn but is open to acquisitions, its chief executive said on Tuesday. Like its global rivals, Lenovo faces increasingly tough market conditions as businesses cut back on technology spending. "There is no...

  • Parsing the hardware landscape: x86 servers, PCs and laptops

    ZDNet - 263 days 10 hours 3 minutes ago

    The hardware replacement cycle continues apace despite a global downturn, according to Forrester Research.  In our last installment of parsing Forrester's emerging hardware trend reports on the state of enterprise and SMB hardware trends,  we look at hardware developments. The big themes: Dell is seen as a go-to vendor. Enterprises are...

  • Symantec to release Endpoint Virtualization Suite in spring

    InfoWorld - 279 days 1 hour 39 minutes ago

    Symantec Tuesday unveiled Endpoint Virtualization Suite, its set of server-based tools for controlling and delivering laptop and desktop application environments through flexible online provisioning. The suite includes Symantec Workspace Streaming, Workspace Corporate, Workspace Remote, Workspace Virtualization and Workspace Profiles, used...

  • Lenovo CEO Resignation Tied to Company Performance

    eWeek - 291 days 6 hours 28 minutes ago

    The U.S. recession and sluggish global economy has shown several vulnerabilities in the PC market in the last few months, but Lenovo?s latest results demonstrate how badly some companies have fared as both consumers and businesses curtail their spending. For Lenovo, which is best known for its ThinkPad laptops, the lack of consumer spending in...

  • What If Windows 7 Flops?

    eWeek - 68 days 12 hours 40 minutes ago

    The most recent Dell earnings showed steep declines in PC sales, which dragged overall corporate earnings by 23 percent. The numbers are stark: sales to large corporate customers down 32 percent and PC sales down 33 percent. The trend is not unique to Dell. HP, Lenovo, Acer and other Windows-based PC manufacturers have noted declines in...

 

BNET TalkbackShare your ideas and expertise on this topic

Please add your comment:

  1. You are currently: a Guest |
  2.  

Basic HTML tags that work in comments are: bold (<b></b>), italic (<i></i>), underline (<u></u>), and hyperlink (<a href></a)

advertisement
advertisement
  • Click Here
  • Click Here
  • Click Here
advertisement