Smart Office

SMBs Want Quality Notebooks

The Australian notebook market is booming. There are more vendors coming onto the scene with products at cheap prices. However, resellers need not worry because SMB consumers purchase notebooks on features rather than price.

 

In August, industry researcher IDC Australia released preliminary results that saw the Q2 portable PC market in Australia gain a solid increase of 25 per cent for the quarter and a rise of 53 per cent compared to the same period in 2004. The key factors driving this surge, according to IDC, are pricepoint pressure amongst brand names – the introduction of a sub-$1000 notebook from Acer and HP through BigW, Harvey Norman and OfficeWorks – and an extremely competitive local market which is “bordering on saturation”.According to IDC senior analyst, Michael Sager, this rise in notebook unit sales “certainly wasn’t normal”. “If you looking at the first quarter and the fourth quarter for 2004, it was the back-to-school and work era. However, the market went into decline in the first quarter. Not long after Acer went into the market with a sub-$1000 laptop, HP and Dell, depending upon the week, drove down their laptop prices as well,” adds Sager.
Based on preliminary findings, Sager says, Acer’s 15-inch sub-$1000 laptop outsold desktops for the quarter. Shifting sales away from reseller desktops and into cheap mass retail notebooks is not going to make Acer many friends in the channel, but Sager believes that Acer’s move did not harm the reseller channel. Rather he thinks it created a new market. “They did it in a way that didn’t eat into the reseller channel by going to BigW. Instead of taking more pieces from the pie, they have added new ingredients to it.”
According to Raymond Vardanega, marketing director at Acer Oceania, the notebook market has been heading toward the $1000 mark for a while. “When the US notebook market broke out with a US$999 product, we researched the psychological implications to this price barrier. We found that typically this price barrier sparks people’s thinking process.” Vardanega is quick to point out that this notebook is aimed solely at the consumer market. A lower priced notebook was also released for the SMB market and sold through its traditional distribution channels. “It’s a really important breakthrough for us to work closely with suppliers; we made sure the sub-$1000 notebook was done financially responsibly for our overall business,” he explains.  “We had to differentiate the pure home user from the business user – the two are mutually exclusive. Selling through BigW and OfficeWorks offered us access to new people, new areas and price points.
“Demand for notebooks in the SMB space and the business space has become much more affordable. Many businesses are seen as having employees working from home and working on the road, so our resellers from this sector are very important to Acer,” he adds.
However, not all brand name portable PC companies are eager to jump on the price pressure bandwagon. According to Matt Codrington, product marketing manager at Toshiba’s Information Systems Division, selling a sub-$1000 portable PC is not difficult.
“Anyone can give away PCs. Customers, when they purchase a notebook in the SMB space, look at getting best value for their money. Users will look at what it costs (as well as running costs), look at the real business product, battery life and notebook mobility, security features,” says Codrington. “The driving factor for resellers in this market is the importance in balance. The market needs to be about more than just commodities – reseller’s when selling need to look at who the real winner is and what can they do to make sure they open their doors next week. The market is not about cheap notebooks but the best way to use it.”
According to Sager, the notebook market in Australia is much more competitive than it has been in the past. New vendors are trying to establish themselves and gain an understanding of the market.
“There is not so much market saturation as there is vendor saturation,” he says. “What has happened is that the Australian market has attracted so many vendors. The hitch is that all the vendors have high growth expectations, and unless those vendors can become established they’ll receive heat from their headquarters. What will happen with the saturation is that certain vendors will begin to fall back.”
Codrington agrees with this, up to a point: “I don’t think it’s so much as saturation, but a continuing evolution. Some vendors will succeed, but some will drop off.”
He adds that it is quality and utility that is driving the notebook market in the SMB sector – convergence is also an important factor. “We all use email and convergence extends these capabilities,” he explains. “Users want a notebook that can deliver content and allow them to create their own digital content. The ability to watch a DVD or listen to music is now standard and is creating complex content.
“All this can be done with convergence – it’s changing the way we use technology. The proliferation of broadband creates many security issues and a wireless network can be more secure than a wired network, however most businesses may not understand that yet,” he adds.
Up-and-coming Taiwanese company BenQ also feels that Australian users know exactly what they want when purchasing a laptop.
Simon Liu, BenQ notebooks channel manager says: “Mentally Australian’s want the latest technology from Asia, but they want European quality with Asian pricing. The SMB market is still after quality. Resellers must understand quality because pricepoint is
really for the consumer market.”
Ted Chan, managing director at ASUS – another Taiwanese company rated strongly by IDC – believes the notebook is an individual worker’s ‘weapon of choice’ in the professional field.
“Users aren’t buying notebooks because of price drops. They spend two to three month’s worth of salary on notebooks. The key buying factor isn’t price, its reliability and quality. Quality comes first.” 
“Cheap brings more attention, however manufacturing capabilities are more important. Not all notebook brands are manufacturers.
We sell through resellers; if anything happens with our product we give global two year warranties. We can go and pick up the product from any location and fix it up. Servicing a laptop product is part of the total cost of ownership,” Chan explains.
Sager believes that this is one reason why the growth in the whitebooks market is being stunted. “The whitebook market is
not doing well because people buy those products based on price.
As consumer tastes become more sophisticated, it gets more expensive to build a stable notebook. For BenQ and Asus, it’s easier
for them to build their own notebooks and pick it up and repair it.”
Vardanega also feels whitebook businesses don’t have an easy time making reliable products. “It’s far more difficult to run a whitebook business than a whitebox business – it’s mainly due to logistics. Australian consumers want what is best for them,” he says.
Australian consumers want notebooks that are reliable, wireless and have key features tailored to their individual needs. Now that customers have a range of vendors to choose from, the popularity of notebooks is skyrocketing. The mobile PC might, according to IDC, overtake the desktop PC by 2007. But don’t mourn the death of the desktop just yet – there will always be a place in the market for these products.
Vardanega goes on to say: “[The death of desktop is] widely known and commented on. That is not to say desktops are dead. Mark Twain once said ‘the reports on my death are greatly exaggerated’. The PC is dead, long live the PC – yes notebooks are new and attractive, however PCs are still cheaper than notebooks. Desktops are still an aspect of every business that requires a PC for specific needs. It will become a niche in the marketplace.”
Sager also believes that the desktop will still play a role in the marketplace. “The desktop still has a space, even though the marketplace is dec
lining. As far as the notebook becoming the domain of the home, it is a very safe bet to say it will be a critical piece of the home. To date, notebooks have been a push factor (often unbeknownst) for consumers to push wireless networks in the home. That is slowly beginning to change and in the future the growth in broadband and wireless in the home (eventually WiMax) will be a significant
driver for the notebook space.”

HP's digital arena

Hewlett-Packard (HP) continues its push to dominate the Australian digital entertainment arena.

It has released a new range of sliver HP Media Centre PCs (MCPC) -the ultimate one-stop home entertainment system.
The new range combines HP’s vast experience in personal computing with cutting edge digital entertainment solutions creating the future hub for digital home living.
The range comes equipped with Microsoft Windows XP Media Centre Edition, and provides customers with every solution needed for the ultimate lounge room experience. Users can pause, rewind live TV or radio broadcasts; music lovers can experience their own digital music jukebox by assembling their entire CD, MP3 and  iPod collections on the 160GB portable hard disk; and photography enthusiasts can trawl through their library of images, all from the comfort of their sofa using a single compact remote control.
The products all feature an inbuilt LightScribe direct disk labeling technology. LightScribe enables users to burn text and photo images directly onto CDs.
No need for clumsy stickers or messy marker pens. The silkscreen-quality labels  give consumers the quality previously only available  on  professional  and  entertainment industry labels. By burning images or messages directly to disks, users can personalise disks of photos and music – wedding anniversaries, birthdays and holidays photo collections can now become personalised, professional and heartfelt looking gifts. HP’s MCPC  m7199a  is priced at $3,599  ($2,800 CPU only / F1905 19″ LCD Monitor $799).

BigAir's business grade Voice over IP

BigAir Australia is intent on eliminating legacy PSTN and ISDN lines with the release of VoIP services over wireless for businesses.

BigAir’s wireless last mile network and the company’s new IP-Centrex services, businesses can do away with their reliance on traditional phone lines thereby cutting communication costs, and also access a range of high-end PABX features including voice mail, interactive voice response (IVR), auto attendant, call grouping and transfers without the need to invest in expensive PABX systems.
“We have a solution for businesses looking to reduce their monthly calling costs and expensive line rental costs. BigAir’s new business-grade VoIP and IP-Centrex services provide significant savings and at the same time provide SMEs with advanced telephony features,” said Jason Ashton, joint managing director, BigAir.
BigAir provides IP phones from $250, which include PABX functionality and competitive call rates including 10c local calls, and 10c un-timed long distance to capital cities including Sydney, Melbourne, and Brisbane. Calls to fixed lines in popular international destinations like the USA, UK, HK, and Japan are 5c per minute.  A fully featured in-dial number is available from $5 per month, and this is able to replace a more expensive traditional phone line.
As part of its vision for the 100 percent wirelessly connected IP office, BigAir also offers web hosting, email services, Virtual Private Networks (VPNs), along with its business-grade high-speed broadband services.

Sony Memory Top Up

Sony Australia has introduced the 2GB Memory Stick PRO Duo (high speed) and 4GB Memory Stick PRO (high speed) to its flash media family.

These Memory Stick products are the ideal solution for consumers looking to store and transfer large quantities of digital content.

The 2GB Memory Stick PRO Duo (high speed, small form factor) and 4GB Memory Stick PRO (highspeed, regular form factor) supports faster read and write speeds of up to 80Mbps – so it can be used as a data storage tool for business applications.

 The 4GB MS PRO has a format specified minimum write speed to ensure high quality, real-time

recording of moving images. It is compatible with both standard Memory Stick devices and – to take advantage of the higher transfer speeds – with a wide selection of Memory Stick PRO devices, including high mega-pixel digital cameras such as DSC-W7, DSC-P200, DSC-V3 and the prosumer Cybershot DSC-F828. The 4GB Memory Stick is priced at $1999.

The 2GB Memory Stick PRO Duo provides virtual storage space whilst taking up less physical space. It is compatible with the array of Memory Stick PRO Duo devices currently available including pocket-sized Cyber-shot digital still cameras, compact Handycam camcorders, PSP (PlayStation Portable) and Sony Ericsson mobile phones.

Priced at $449, the 2GB Memory Stick PRO Duo, with an adaptor, is also compatible with devices that offer a full size Memory Stick PRO media slot.

“Sony has reinforced its strong position within the flash memory market with these new Memory Stick products,” said Matthew Luu. “Boasting larger capacity and higher speed data transfer rates, they are compatible with the rapidly growing number of compact, high storage capacity digital products.”

Atdec Elevates The Notebook

Notebooks are the weapons of choice for workers on the road to the humble student. Yet, it’s also one of the worst ergonomically designed products out, however one Australia company is trying to change that.

Australian designer and manufacturer, Atdec Pty Limited, has designed a portable notebook stand so users can work on the notebook comfortably.

The Visidec Notebook Traveller 17T weighs 0.6kgs yet is strong enough to support laptop computers weighing up to 4kgs (8.5 lbs). Its designed for most notebooks with screens up to 17 inch widescreen and the stand folds down to a mere 10mm (3/8 inches). It will also fit easily into a laptop carry bag.

Constructed from strong a durable polycarbonate, it also comes with its own protective nylon travel pouch.

Steve Crozier, Atdec’s Managing Director said, “our new Visidec Notebook Traveller 17T reduces the risks associated with long-term use of notebook computers by allowing the screen to be adjusted to the correct ergonomic height for the user. It has four height levels, and the support feet can be raised or lowered enabling them to adjust to a wide variety of notebooks.”

Visidec Notebook Traveller is designed to be used in conjunction with a separate keyboard and mouse and other peripheral devices. The actual notebook support area measures 260mm (10 _ in.) x 275mm (10 _ in.).Priced at $50, it also comes with a five-year warranty.

Western Digital increases warranty

After listening to its customers, Western Digital has decided to extend the warranty periods of its hard drive products

Western Digital Corp has announced it will increase the warranty period of some of its hard drives by standardizing all WD enterprise drives to five years and WD desktops and notebook drives to three years.
The decision came after a recent survey of thousands of WD customers found that hard drive buyers overwhelmingly rate reliability as the most important feature in a drive. Warranty, performance and capacity also were high on customers’ lists of priorities.
“WD has carefully listened to customers, whose storage needs and buying preferences vary significantly based on geography and application,” said Arif Shakeel, president and chief operating officer for WD. “Many of our customers offer 3-year warranties on their desktop and notebook systems and 5-year warranties on their servers. WD’s new warranty policy aligns with the industry standards and meets or exceeds customer expectations. WD’s longer warranty periods provide customers highly valued additional peace of mind.”
WD desktop and notebook hard drives, including WD Scorpio, WD Caviar, WD Caviar SE and WD Caviar SE16 drive families, manufactured or purchased on June 1, 2005, or later are now covered by WD’s 3-year warranty. The company’s enterprise drives, including WD Raptor and WD Caviar RE, are now supported with its 5-year warranty beginning the same date. Previously, the company maintained a policy including 5, 3 and 1-year periods.
This policy is now in effect for Australian, all drives sold or purchased after June 1, 2005 will also be affected by the new policy.

Quantum's New Tape Storage Family

Quantum’s PX500 series of modular tape automation platform is now availbale.

The midrange automation family enables customers to meet scalability requirements within a platform, with far less complexity.

The PX500 Series – consisting of the PX502, PX506 and PX510 – offers independent rackmount systems of 4U, 10U and 18U (rack-unit). The systems are based on a common, modular architecture that allows customers the flexibility to mix and match rack density, capacity and performance, best meeting backup, recovery and archive needs today and into the future at an unmatched cost per gigabyte (GB).

The three systems of the PX500 Series – the PX502, PX506 and PX510 – are tailored for customers to standardize their tape-based backup, recovery and archive on a single platform. Each library has its own robotics and power for independent operation and utilises the same drive canisters, cartridge magazines and other key components to minimise parts and reduce complexity.

Additionally, the new tape libraries contain StorageCare Guardian, a secure, remote monitoring and diagnostic solution.

 

Verbatim Reinforces DVD Discs

Verbatim has released a Video DVD discs that’s coated with VideoGard, a hard coat technology.

The VideoGard-enhanced discs make irreplaceable home videos and recordings of favourite TV programs 40 times more resistant to damage without a significant increase in the cost of the media (based on calibrated scratch tests against standard discs without the hard coat).

Each Verbatim hard coat DVDR is packaged in a highly durable slim video box that is about one-half the thickness of a standard DVD movie case. Although it only requires about half the shelf space, the box is the same height as a standard video tall box, so it will fit nicely in a video library with existing DVD Videos.

Verbatim Video DVD+R media with VideoGard protection is available for $19.95 for a 10 pack of Video Trim Cases (P/N # 95104).