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PC Sales See 'Longest Decline' In History

dryriver writes "Global personal computer (PC) sales have fallen for the fifth quarter in a row, making it the 'longest duration of decline' in history. Worldwide PC shipments totalled 76 million units in the second quarter, a 10.9% drop from a year earlier, according to research firm Gartner. PC sales have been hurt in recent years by the growing popularity of tablets. Gartner said the introduction of low-cost tablets had further hurt PC sales, especially in emerging economies. 'In emerging markets, inexpensive tablets have become the first computing device for many people, who at best are deferring the purchase of a PC,' said Mikako Kitagawa, principal analyst at Gartner, said in a statement."

385 comments

  1. Whatever by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The PC is doomed, blah blah blah. All the grandma's are buying tablets. Anyone who does any real work are buying PC's or already have what they need. Nothing to see here.

    1. Re:Whatever by unimacs · · Score: 2

      The PC is doomed, blah blah blah. All the grandma's are buying tablets. Anyone who does any real work are buying PC's or already have what they need. Nothing to see here.

      What's funny about this is that 20 years ago my boss was saying the same thing. Just replace "PC" with mini or mainframe computer. The lines between PC and mini-computer got blurred and I don't know if there really is such a beast as a modern mini computer. It would just be called a server. The thing is that there are far more servers than there every were mini-computers. While the PC won't meet exactly the same fate, I think the number of devices that get referred to as "PCs" will continue to decline. Most "personal" computing will occur on much smaller devices.

      In our office today we have more laptops than PCs and a large chunk of electronic communication now occurs on smartphones. Tablets are starting to get used in the field where laptops never quite worked as well as hoped. PCs (workstations really) are reserved for people that need more computational power. Folks who don't need much computing power and don't need a computer outside the office get terminals.

      It's probably been about 5 years since I've had a PC or Mac desktop at home.

    2. Re:Whatever by cod3r_ · · Score: 1

      This probably has just as much to do with the fact that the machines are much faster and the operating systems more stable, virus protection more sound, yadda yadda yadda.. but people can keep their same machine for years w/out upgrading. Not like it use to be every year you wanted to upgrade the processor because the machine was godawful slow.

    3. Re:Whatever by sjames · · Score: 1

      The mini seems to have just merged into the server class PC. The PCs got faster and now have remote management, ECC RAM, etc like a mini.

      Some (a small majority) of tablets are just PCs in a tablet form factor even now.

    4. Re:Whatever by unimacs · · Score: 1

      Some (a small majority) of tablets are just PCs in a tablet form factor even now.

      I kind of doubt that actually. Maybe in terms of models but terms of actual sales I think iPads, Kindle Fires, Galaxy Notes, etc have blown away PC based tablets.

    5. Re:Whatever by Joce640k · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The PC is doomed, blah blah blah. All the grandma's are buying tablets. Anyone who does any real work are buying PC's or already have what they need. Nothing to see here.

      Yep. Most computer users turned out to be media consumers who a) don't need the hassle of maintaining a PC, and b) like the size/shape of tablets.

      The sky won't fall. This "fatal" decline will level off soon when everybody finally figures out which camp they're in.

      --
      No sig today...
    6. Re:Whatever by interval1066 · · Score: 1

      Well, I'm not giving up my Intel '86-based architecture anytime soon but for years, since the mid 80's, I built all my own pc's from components (HAD to have that awsome GPU card), but I have to say, since about 2009 or so its been all notebooks and ultrabooks. I haven't wanted to own a console form pc in years. Just purchased what will be my last aquisition for a while too, a 13" MacBook Pro Retina. With a quad core i5 @ 2.5 GHz and more resolutions than I can shake a stick at I'll be set for the next few years, barring some unfortunate coffee spill.

      --
      Python: 'And then suddenly you have a language which says "we're all stuck with whatever the whiniest coder wants".'
    7. Re:Whatever by hairyfeet · · Score: 2

      Exactly, you can slap an ULV Phenom or Athlon X4 together with some ECC RAM and a RAID and tada! Instant SMB server, does all the jobs we used to get the mini boxes for and its a hell of a lot cheaper and less power hungry.

      What amazes me is there is soooo much money lying on the table for the PC OEMs to just pick up, but they aren't picking it up. What am I talking about? what's making me damned good money right now,HTPCs and home media applications. Folks are getting sick of the ARM based one trick ponies that they find some of their sites won't play on,the browser becomes out of date or the thing stops getting supported and it quickly becomes a hunk of useless plastic to them. Thanks to the blessing that is HDMI its beyond butt simple to plug a PC into a TV, they can have a full size wireless keyboard mouse or one of those Lenovo excellent one hand PC remotes and tada! A one stop shop that can stream, be a media tank for the whole house, hell slap a $70 card (I recommend the HD7750, nearly the same speed as the HD6850 at less than half the power and heat) and you'll be rocking your games in glorious 1080P in no time, with your choice of controller. Hell with Steam having Big Picture mode and a few tweaks to WMC and its the easiest to use system you've ever seen, I've got customers with little kids that can just grab the remote and be rocking their Plants Vs Zombies or watch their favorite Disney movies at the click of a button.

      But most folks don't know how easy it is now,they think its like the bad old days with S-Video and the PITA setups and having to have some insanely huge fan blasting box sitting there just to have an HTPC when nothing can be farther from the truth. If all they want is the casual game and surfing they can get a slick mini that looks great under the set or if they want to game i can take something like this quad core which by itself frankly looks good next to the set (I've had several that looked at the case and decided to just keep it instead of having me go for the HTPC box) and just have me slap it into one of the mini cases or for some reason this one seems to be REAL popular, probably because it looks great on its side and gives them plenty of USB ports.

      So if they want to sell more PCs and laptops frankly they need to be putting out some ads showing folks just how easy it is to integrate a PC or laptop into an entertainment center. Once folks see how easy it is to add a living room PC they tell their friends, who tell their friends, next thing you know your moving 10 HTPCs for every office or gamer box. Folks just love having everything at their fingertips and an HTPC with a couple of TB of space lets them have that, VERY cool and an easy sell IMHO.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    8. Re:Whatever by sjames · · Score: 1

      I actually meant minority but I had too little coffee and too much distraction at the time.

    9. Re: Whatever by thetoadwarrior · · Score: 1

      They're not and not because of tablets but because there's no reason to upgrade. For what most people do even 6 year old machines are fine. PC manufacturers for the most part are offering the same thing they've been offering for decades minus the CPU upgrade. If they'd at least go the apple route and find new features then maybe people would find a reason to update their PC. Tablets are still new so most people don't have one so naturally they'll have stronger sales with less effort.

    10. Re:Whatever by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You, sir, are no true slashdotter. No PC at home! I think you're making that up.

    11. Re:Whatever by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What an annoying comment, like nails on a blackboard. The only person in the world who could say "blah blah blah" without looking stupid was Lucille Ball, and she wasn't saying "blah blah blah" she was saying "habla habla habla" -- Spanish for "talk talk talk." But that's not nearly as annoying as "All the grandma's are buying tablets". WTF, people? Did this guy even reach the fifth grade? I don't want to read anything written by someone who's barely literate!

      There's nothing insightful at all about that comment. -1 stupid. I hope I run across it metamoderating. Barely literate comments should always be modded overrated, how insightful can an uneducated person be?

    12. Re:Whatever by amicusNYCL · · Score: 1

      Anyone who does any real work are buying PC's or already have what they need.

      I think that's the real point. People doing office work have PCs that are plenty powerful. A sub-$1000 machine can last for a lot longer these days then they used to. A machine with 2-4GB of RAM and a 2- or 4-core CPU is going to be able to run Office, Outlook, and a browser for years and years to come. I still upgrade at about the same frequency because I want the best for my games, but I'm an outlier. The major thing that geeks think should push new sales these days is probably SSD storage. After experiencing a setup with SSD I would never go back to a magnetic disk for my boot/application drive, that's the only component I would really want to replace in my office computers. Everything else is plenty fast for everything I need it for at work.

      The days when a $1000 computer would only be able to run the latest Office applications for a few years before you start looking for an upgrade are over.

      --
      "Our two-party system is like a bowl of shit looking at itself in a mirror." - Lewis Black
    13. Re:Whatever by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      PCs (workstations really) are reserved for people that need more computational power. Folks who don't need much computing power and don't need a computer outside the office get terminals.

      You have that backwards. Terminals are connected to servers and mainframes, with far more processing power than your puny PC. PCs are for light work, like spreadsheets, word processing, small databases. Rendering photorealistic 3D images, or scientific modeling, needs real horsepower; horsepower you only get from a mainframe.

      Tablets are for reading and simple, non-typing tasks like checking off check boxes.

    14. Re:Whatever by Solandri · · Score: 1

      Yep. Most computer users turned out to be media consumers who a) don't need the hassle of maintaining a PC, and b) like the size/shape of tablets.

      Is there any data that actually backs this up? Every tablet owner I know, every one of them, also owns a PC or Mac. So they're getting a tablet in addition to their PC, not to replace it.

    15. Re:Whatever by Hymer · · Score: 1

      Last I've checked almost all consultants that comes to us has changed their PC Laptops to Apple Laptops... this has happened in the exact same 5 quarters Gartner is reporting about. I am NOT talking about management consultants or other non-tech consultants, I'm talking about hardcore IT people.

    16. Re:Whatever by Sockatume · · Score: 1

      Bear in mind it will be fatal to those companies who built their entire business selling $500 laptops to people who just want Facebook and Youtube; the PC business is massively oversized right now because of those companies. The "work PC" isn't going anywhere though.

      --
      No kidding!!! What do you say at this point?
    17. Re:Whatever by ArsonSmith · · Score: 1

      I've noticed we have more and more people that are turning to tablets for larger and larger portions of their work. Many now have the case with the build in blue tooth keyboard.

      I still think that the tablet will replace the laptop as they get more and more powerful and eventual will doc to a workstation much like most people use laptops today. The PC form factor is what will go away. The workstation will still exist.

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
    18. Re:Whatever by amicusNYCL · · Score: 1

      Desktop computers are never going to "go away", not as long as they remain the most powerful way to play games.

      --
      "Our two-party system is like a bowl of shit looking at itself in a mirror." - Lewis Black
    19. Re:Whatever by ArsonSmith · · Score: 1

      Much in the same way the buggy whips never really went away.

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
    20. Re:Whatever by amicusNYCL · · Score: 1

      That's right, it's exactly like that. Except not at all.

      --
      "Our two-party system is like a bowl of shit looking at itself in a mirror." - Lewis Black
    21. Re:Whatever by sjames · · Score: 1

      It's a great setup. I'm using a spare laptop for that. Unlike newer DVRs, it doesn't try to tell me what I can record, how long I can keep it, or insist on phoning home and wiping everything out if home won't answer. It also doesn't complain if I want to save something off or burn it to disk.

  2. I got yer fix! by KatchooNJ · · Score: 5, Funny

    Tablets now fall under the umbrella of being a PC. BAM! Problem fixed... no more PC sales decline.

    --
    "Never give up, for that is just the time and place when the tide will change." -Harriet Beecher Stowe ^_^
    1. Re:I got yer fix! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Personal computers only include rectangular towers with some larger form ATX motherboard. That other stuff is clearly not for computing --or personal for that matter.

    2. Re:I got yer fix! by Internal+Modem · · Score: 4, Informative

      Gartner says that these PC shipment numbers include Windows 8 tablets, but not Apple’s iPads.

    3. Re:I got yer fix! by Riceballsan · · Score: 1

      The year of the psudo-linux home PC has arrived!!!!! Now having a tight match-up between apple and google, while Microsoft kind of fighting to get in the door... Which I kind of find ironic. Of course I have to say, I'm not a huge fan of either of the main competitors, nor the standard of walled gardens, but what I am a fan of, is having 2 competitors with drastically different base OS, giving developers an incentive to develop onto platform independent technologies, which is good for the existence of home-brews, Linux PCs etc...

    4. Re:I got yer fix! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Gartner says that these PC shipment numbers include Windows 8 tablets, but not Apple’s iPads.

      So they're including the five people who bought Windows 8 tablets

    5. Re:I got yer fix! by ADRA · · Score: 1

      In other news, Unix shipments had their worst shipments in decades, yet there seems to be a competing little thing called Linux which is doing just fine. I honestly had this same angst when people moved off desktops to get laptops. Its time to get over it.

      Facts:
      1. More people use computing devices than ever before
      2. More people carry around their computing devices than ever before
      3. Many (most?) people use computing devices to consume media being it music, movies, or web pages (posted). The one outlier is text messaging and Facebook posts which both seem to be quite conducive to most common computing platforms

      --
      Bye!
    6. Re:I got yer fix! by Patch86 · · Score: 2

      Well yeah, but adding "zero" to a total doesn't generally have much impact on the results.

    7. Re:I got yer fix! by rsborg · · Score: 1

      Gartner says that these PC shipment numbers include Windows 8 tablets, but not Apple’s iPads.

      Because... clearly the iPad isn't a tablet. WTF?

      --
      Make sure everyone's vote counts: Verified Voting
    8. Re:I got yer fix! by mcrbids · · Score: 2

      Didn't you get the news? Fully 10 people have now adopted Windows 8 tablets, 100% growth!

      --
      I have no problem with your religion until you decide it's reason to deprive others of the truth.
    9. Re:I got yer fix! by ArsonSmith · · Score: 1

      Yes it is nice that all these apps that are being made for iOS and Android all just run on Linux PCs due to the platform independent technologies they all use.

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
    10. Re:I got yer fix! by Riceballsan · · Score: 1

      Far from the present where they are, but there is more of an incentive. It is worth noting a rise in use of unity, web based programs etc... It is far from everywhere, but it is a slow and steady increase.

  3. tablets? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    pc owners are the producers of content on that computer network, not tablet users

  4. Not necessarily because of usage. by Brad1138 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Computers made in the last 5 or so years are darn fast, and unless you are a hard core gamer, will be plenty fast for the next 5-10 years. I just built my father a modern computer in the hopes he won't need a new one for about 10 years.

    --
    If you could reason with religious people, there would be no religious people
    1. Re:Not necessarily because of usage. by Hsien-Ko · · Score: 5, Funny

      But it has Windows 8.

    2. Re:Not necessarily because of usage. by kelarius · · Score: 5, Informative

      Computers made in the last 5 or so years are darn fast, and unless you are a hard core gamer, will be plenty fast for the next 5-10 years. I just built my father a modern computer in the hopes he won't need a new one for about 10 years.

      Pretty much this. I run a couple of repair shops and we end up fixing 5 year old computers more often than replacing them simply because for day to day browsing tasks, they are more than sufficient. Hell, most of them can even decode HD to some extent, which pretty much rounds out what 90% of the market uses them for. PCs are becoming a niche market, get used to it, it wont change. Tablets and phones are the future, especially as input methods improve (attachable keyboards, docking stations and such)

      --
      Personally I'd rather have my idiots at home glued to the TV than out doing idiotic things
    3. Re:Not necessarily because of usage. by javakah · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Well, more than that, they seem to have stalled in terms of getting much better. 4.5 years ago I built an i7 system. I've been used to getting a new computer every 2-3 years that blows the old one out of the water. This time however, there just hasn't really been much to upgrade to. The CPU specs are still competitive. We're still at quad cores. We've gone from tri-channel memory on the i7's to dual channel. I've upgraded the graphics card though.

      In the past, people would buy new computers because their old ones were made obsolete by new ones (so not necessarily because their old ones stopped working). This hasn't happened in a while, so why would people buy new computers that aren't an upgrade, if their old ones are still working?

    4. Re:Not necessarily because of usage. by h4rr4r · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Get an SSD.

      Dropping an SSD into a 4 year old machine will make a bigger difference than getting a new CPU for 90% of people.

    5. Re:Not necessarily because of usage. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And - add to that..

      De price of hardware (CPU's, Memory and especially Hard disks) has NOT been gowing down - it just stay's leveled.

      One of the prime reasons I upgraded my old hardware in the past, was that prices of near-top-notch hardware came into an afordable range. This has sadly not been the case latest years. An i7 is just as expensive as a few years back. Would I like to upgrade? Well - as I am using music/sound software (Cubase, Ableton Live, Sonar) I would LOVE to have a more potent system. But -as said- the prices did not go down, and the better hardware is just still out of range for me..

      Result? I have not upgraded anything (well some specialised sound hardware, but no PC).

      I think I am not the only one...

    6. Re:Not necessarily because of usage. by javakah · · Score: 1

      You are right on this. The only other changes that I've made beyond upgrading the graphics card have been to add an extra hard drive, as well as adding in an SSD.

    7. Re:Not necessarily because of usage. by gman003 · · Score: 1

      The high-end i7s are now quad-channel, not triple-channel.

      There's basically two types of i7s - i5s with hyperthreading enabled (880, 2600K, 3770K, 4770K), and Xeons with fewer cores, higher clocks and no multi-socket (960, 990X, 3930K). They're completely different - the former have a dual-channel memory controller, fewer PCIe lanes, often have integrated graphics left in, and max out at quad-core. The latter use a different socket (sometimes Xeon-compatible), have triple- or quad-channel memory (depending on generation), and max out at six cores. They're even on different release schedules - while Haswell "low-end" i7s are out, the next "high-end" i7s are the Ivy Bridge-E series.

      I actually think they should change the naming - call the high-end ones "i9" or something. It's odd that they have i5 and (low) i7s, which differ only slightly, as separate brands, but combine the two types of i7s into a single category despite being so different.

    8. Re:Not necessarily because of usage. by lexx21 · · Score: 1

      I absolutely agree. My desktop machine is running a quad core that I picked up a few years ago. No need to build anything new because for what I am doing at the moment it serves my needs MORE than adequately. VMware workstation runs very smoothly. Video is encoded/decoded with no issues. If I have to wait a few extra seconds for something to complete... big deal. To continually feed the computer manufacturing industry just because they come out with something that is marginally faster is pretty much insane. One thing that the author did not mention though..... we have been in a recession. With people out of work the last thing on their plate is going to be getting a new pc. That's like the record industry crying a river about how sales are down when the news is full of stories about people losing their homes and living in their cars. Just my 2 cents.

    9. Re:Not necessarily because of usage. by jaymz666 · · Score: 1

      When you combine this with the large rollouts of Virtual Desktops in the enterprise, it's a perfect storm for lower PC sales.

    10. Re:Not necessarily because of usage. by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      I have saved a number of machines from the rubbish bin by adding new video cards to them. All of those cards were dirt cheap but still a massive improvement with whatever original came on those machines. The end users were happy as clams as the machines ran as if they were shiny and new again.

      Repeat that a few thousand times and watch the global sales numbers implode.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    11. Re:Not necessarily because of usage. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Windows 8.works great. Sure in a few years you might have to upgrade the OS but with any OS you would still need to upgrade the OS to stay current. Or keep it off the internet and stay at what every OS level you want.

    12. Re:Not necessarily because of usage. by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      That would be a big one too.
      A nice cheap SSD + graphics card and you are looking at $150 and what to most users will be like a new computer.

    13. Re:Not necessarily because of usage. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      food for thought, BDRW drives have been around since 2007. That means there are 6 year old PCs with BluRay Drives, which means they can decode 1080P video with no lag.

      I had a gaming PC with 2007 era parts in it I put together for 900 bucks. Lasted me all through college with hardcore gaming (Skyrim at high settings, FarCry, All the Mass Effects, Grand Theft Auto 4, etc). I was doing most of my programming at school on a Asus EEE 1000HE, and it was more then adequate for most Assignments. I have since replaced the two with a monstourous G75VX, and once I put a BDRW drive, a SSD, and Some more RAM in it, it should be good for the next 5 years of Maximum gaming, and another 5 at Medium graphics.

      This isn't 1995, you don't need to buy a new PC every other Year manufacturers.

    14. Re:Not necessarily because of usage. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm a hard core gamer and just haven't had the funds to build a new computer recently. My current issue is that my computer runs on DDR2 memory. I have 8 GB, a quad core(Q9550, which until recently was sitting quite happily in the higher rankings on Tom's Hardware), far too much storage(about 4 TB), a SSD for booting, etc.

      So really, my bottle neck is my memory. In order to upgrade it, though, I need to get a new mobo. With a new mobo will come a new processor. I figure after getting a mobo, processor, and memory, I might as well go for the moon and upgrade it all at once rather than piece-meal. New power supply, new GPUs, new HDDs and SSDs, new case and new blu ray/dvd/cd drives(even this may be superfluous; I don't remember the last time I used a disc).

      But still. I'm an avid gamer, and while I can't run max settings on most games, my machine is competent enough to run a 64 bit OS, DirectX11, and I never have issues with lag(graphical or networking), and everything is blazing fast and responsive.

      If a normal person had my computer, they'd probably be set for another 5 years, if not more. Pretty sweet for a computer where parts were totaled around $2,000(I'm excluding most storage drives and disc drives, because I've kept many from previous computers), keeping in mind that some tablets are $500+ and last a couple years before you're 'supposed' to get the new one.

      I would credit it mostly to the explosion in RAM. It used to be people would complain about sluggish-ness. XP started by running off of something like 128 or 256 MB of RAM, but towards the end of its life cycle we saw computers with 4GB. Programs like Norton antivirus took advantage of that and said "Hey, why *shouldn't we try to grab 1 GB of RAM?" Well, grandma's computer running on 512 MB or 1 GB of RAM is completely screwed. Then the problem was Vista wanting up to 2GB of RAM, Norton wanting 1GB of RAM, and any computer under 4GB was simply SOL, and if you didn't run 64 bit vista with 8 GB of RAM, you had the pleasure of seeing all of Vista's faults. I'm one such person. I acknowledge Vista has faults, but they're primarily in memory management. If you have so much memory that memory management isn't a problem, then you don't have to worry about the real problem.

      Now, people buy a computer and it comes with *at least* 16 GB of RAM. You could theoretically load the entirety of some games into memory and still have leftovers for the OS and other programs.

    15. Re:Not necessarily because of usage. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The PCs need cheaper parts, popping power supplies and screens burning out in days. People will tolerate it as they use them less (and upgrade to Windows 8 eventually)...

    16. Re:Not necessarily because of usage. by kelarius · · Score: 1

      I'm not really sure what the hell you were trying to say there, are you being sarcastic about crappy parts in PCs and them not mattering anymore?

      --
      Personally I'd rather have my idiots at home glued to the TV than out doing idiotic things
    17. Re:Not necessarily because of usage. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you attach an external keyboard to a tablet it becomes a laptop with a touch input as a mouse. Thats a PC to me.

      I got my first laptop in 2008 after being a lifer on the standard box PC. Haven't looked back since. I still need to plug in an external mouse to get real work done on my laptop though. Same deal as the tablet + external keyboard except you can still get more work done on a laptop than a tablet.

      If kids are using iPads to write papers in college than things have devolved.

    18. Re:Not necessarily because of usage. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Well, also thanks to ARM and the race for power consumption, you'll see probably similar performance on PCs as components are now looking into be more power efficient.

      For a performance geek (like you or me), the cut in power consumption for a PC that is normally plugged to an outlet, it's not significant. I mean, if you have been paying X amount of money for electricity, means you can still pay for it and trying to cut the costs most likely go to installing solar panels or more efficient appliances, rather than getting a new processor.

    19. Re:Not necessarily because of usage. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Windows 8 became generally available 8 months ago.....

      PC sales have dropped for 5 consecutive months....

      Tablets may have something to do with declining sales, but I think Windows 8, and peoples' reluctance to buy a PC with Windows 8 installed, is the biggest contributing factor to the declining sales....

      IMHO

    20. Re:Not necessarily because of usage. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's an interesting conclusion you've drawn. You get a lot of business related to old computers among typical consumers, so old computers are now niche? I don't follow.

    21. Re:Not necessarily because of usage. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Also, many even medium level computers do no have an SSD, so it's a major improvement the upgrade will likely not get.

    22. Re:Not necessarily because of usage. by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 1

      That means there are 6 year old PCs with BluRay Drives, which means they can decode 1080P video with no lag.

      Provided that you had a video card with the necessary circuitry.

      Most tablets have dedicated video decoders and many have encoders (for wireless video). This saves battery power.

      The next big thing is H.265-- and I'm guessing there will be a few years of people complaining about battery life and high cpu-load until video chipsets incorporate dedicated circuitry.

    23. Re:Not necessarily because of usage. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Notebook computers are so inexpensive these days that I was able to buy an Acer Aspire V5 with 64-bit AMD CPU, 8 GB RAM, and 500 GB HDD for less than CAD800.00 in 2012. It is connected to an HDTV via HDMI cable and no more mouse and keyboard cables necessary after plugging in a USB Bluetooth receiver for a Bluetooth mouse and keyboard. I added a webcam recently. Total cost under CAD1000.00. For comparison my first notebook computer was an IBM ThinkPad 755CE with 1 MB RAM, 350 MB HDD and VGA display cost almost CAD8000.00. I miss the keyboard on that notebook computer though.

    24. Re:Not necessarily because of usage. by Princeofcups · · Score: 1

      In the past, people would buy new computers because their old ones were made obsolete by new ones (so not necessarily because their old ones stopped working). This hasn't happened in a while, so why would people buy new computers that aren't an upgrade, if their old ones are still working?

      And what made them obsolete? Software did. Be it more memory for Photoshop, better graphics for Doom, faster CPU for watching video, there was always that killer app that you had to run, and it didn't run on your old machine. Since the software business has been going "cloud," they haven't been pushing the envelope of PC hardware. That right there is a sign of the PC losing it's pre-eminence as the device that everyone must have.

      --
      The only thing worse than a Democrat is a Republican.
    25. Re:Not necessarily because of usage. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      are you working for dice in some capacity?

    26. Re:Not necessarily because of usage. by Brad1138 · · Score: 1

      No, I built it with Windows 7

      --
      If you could reason with religious people, there would be no religious people
  5. definitions matter by argStyopa · · Score: 4, Insightful

    For some reason, there still remains this weird claddistic requirement that "pc's" (ie desktops, I guess?), laptops, and other devices be all conceptualized in separate boxes. Or, it could just be that the companies that are paid to do this sort of info gathering (and sorting) aren't changing as fast as technology...?

    PC stands for 'personal computer', at least it did.

    The laptop was the evolution of the desktop into a more broadly useful form factor.

    The smartphone, and the pad device are precisely the same thing - just other points on the spectrum, not a whole different genus of computer.

    That said, then, if one were to include the counts of all such devices that have the computing power and utility of a desktop even as short as 10 years ago, I hardly believe that the "PC market" is in decline.

    One might even wonder then what the agenda is for such a naked contrivance to present the situation in such a gloomy light might be?

    --
    -Styopa
    1. Re:definitions matter by TeknoHog · · Score: 1

      IIRC, Playstation 2/3 had the ability to install another OS for tax reasons. In Europe, pure gaming machines had higher import duties than computers that could be used for "real work". This is a distinction I'd like to keep in some form, even if there are no tax reasons; the ability to install your own OS and software is a big deal for personal freedom.

      --
      Escher was the first MC and Giger invented the HR department.
    2. Re:definitions matter by MetalliQaZ · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The laptop was the evolution of the desktop into a more broadly useful form factor.

      The smartphone, and the pad device are precisely the same thing - just other points on the spectrum, not a whole different genus of computer.

      I disagree. The evolution from PC -> tablet is at least as profound as the evolution from mainframe -> minicomputer -> PC. Tablets and smartphones are really more of media consumption devices, which go to great ends to de-emphasize composition of anything greater than a photo, SMS or tweet. Laptops were really just a mobility improvement, where tablets are an entirely different mode of usage.

      --
      "Here Lies Philip J. Fry, named for his uncle, to carry on his spirit"
    3. Re:definitions matter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The smartphone, and the pad device are precisely the same thing - just other points on the spectrum, not a whole different genus of computer.

      Those you listed are nothing like computers, well not the computer we know and love here on Slashdot, unless you like Vendor Lock-in and being told what you can and cannot run on said devices.

    4. Re:definitions matter by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 1

      The IBM PC cast a long shadow on the industry.

      Even today, Apple's motto is still "Think Different", a parody of IBM's motto of "Think".

      --
      Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
    5. Re:definitions matter by FranTaylor · · Score: 1

      not the computer we know and love here on Slashdot

      You CLAIM to speak for all slashdot users, but really you speak of the raw newbies who think computers come in a small metal box with an Intel sticker on it.

      unless you like Vendor Lock-in and being told what you can and cannot run on said devices.

      WOW you define words based on what you LIKE? And apparently you've ignorant of the fact that many devices can be unlocked and you can install whatever you want on them.

    6. Re:definitions matter by Sockatume · · Score: 1

      It includes laptops, but excludes tablets and smartphones. (Some analysts idiosyncratically include Windows tablets, or non-Apple tablets, or whatever happens to make a more sellable story.)

      It's interesting because tablet computers are growing while laptops and desktops are shrinking. It's a transitional period.

      --
      No kidding!!! What do you say at this point?
    7. Re:definitions matter by SirGarlon · · Score: 0

      The smartphone, and the pad device are precisely the same thing - just other points on the spectrum, not a whole different genus of computer.

      I disagree. So-called "mobile devices" have locked down operating systems to the point where the end user does not control what is running on the machine. They have dumbed-down user interfaces that often hide the contents of the file system from the user (Android devices may vary), and lack adequately sized keyboards and displays for most professional work.

      My definition of a computer is not "a device that plays streaming video." My definition is more along the lines of "a device that provides data-processing tools to help the user solve original problems." So if, on a given device, I can't write a script to sort the lines of an ASCII file (perhaps after installing a Python interpreter or similar), I wouldn't call that device a PC.

      --
      [Sir Garlon] is the marvellest knight that is now living, for he destroyeth many good knights, for he goeth invisible.
    8. Re:definitions matter by cyber-vandal · · Score: 1

      I don't have to unlock my computer in order to install anything on it. I just plug in a USB stick of the OS and away I go. I shouldn't have to do anything more complex than that for any of the newer class of computing device.

    9. Re:definitions matter by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      What vendor lockin do I have on my Nexus devices?

      I have a non-factory OS, I have a chroot and a nice terminal to use it with. I can install any software I like, since you know I installed the whole damn OS.

    10. Re:definitions matter by BrokenHalo · · Score: 1

      Even today, Apple's motto is still "Think Different"

      What they don't say is "Think different, just so long as you think the same as we do". If anything, Mac boxes are even less configurable to individual tastes than Windows machines.

    11. Re:definitions matter by dugancent · · Score: 1

      You're limited to Android or Linux variants.

      --
      SJWs are the new boogeyman. -Me
    12. Re:definitions matter by evilviper · · Score: 2

      PC stands for 'personal computer', at least it did.

      No, it stands for "IBM-compatible Personal Computer", and it always has. IBM called their first x86 computer a PC, and the name stuck. It does NOT mean any and every computing device designed for home use.

      The laptop was the evolution of the desktop into a more broadly useful form factor.

      Laptops are fully compatible with desktops. Same architecture, similar I/O connectors and ports, everything.

      The smartphone, and the pad device are precisely the same thing - just other points on the spectrum, not a whole different genus of computer.

      Tablets and smartphones are ARM-based devices, not x86-compatible computers. Even if they did have ATOM CPUs, the lack of a BIOS, keyboard, and other legacy cruft would probably break backwards compatibility, and still make it NOT count as a PC.

      Of course you CAN make PCs in tablet form-factors. Microsoft and Intel are desperately trying to force manufacturers to do so, which gives us laptops with hinged touch-screens which can be used as ultra-bulky tablets. If those caught on, instead of ARM-based devices, then you could call them PCs.

      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    13. Re:definitions matter by xgerrit · · Score: 1

      For some reason, there still remains this weird claddistic requirement that "pc's" (ie desktops, I guess?), laptops, and other devices be all conceptualized in separate boxes.

      Maybe it's because even though all of those devices are computers, the companies that are seeing success with them are quite different and so where the power lies has shifted dramatically.

    14. Re:definitions matter by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      How so?
      BSD could be ported, and likely already is.

      What you means is because iOS and Windows are closed I can't run them. To which I say good riddance.

    15. Re:definitions matter by FranTaylor · · Score: 2

      I just plug in a USB stick of the OS and away I go.

      That's pretty much the procedure for installing cyanogenmod on an android tablet

      I shouldn't have to do anything more complex than that for any of the newer class of computing device.

      Well, there you go.

      Yes indeed I choose automobiles based on how hard it is to change the oil filter, which is way more practical than you, because changing oil filters is something that is done way more often than installing an OS.

    16. Re:definitions matter by BasilBrush · · Score: 3, Insightful

      PC stands for 'personal computer', at least it did.

      As far as I'm concerned PC derives from IBM PC. It's a PC if it's an IBM PC, a clone, or one of it's descendants. So it's CPU will be in on of the x86 compatible descendants. And it's firmware will be BIOS, or one of it's descendants such as UEFI (that emulates BIOS for compatibility.)

      The rule of thumb is that a PC is a machine that can run the x86 build of DOS and/or Windows natively.

      ARM based tablets are not PCs. iPad is not a PC. Android tablets aren't PCs. The Microsoft Surface that runs Windows RT isn't a PC. The one that runs Windows 8 is a PC.

    17. Re:definitions matter by BasilBrush · · Score: 0

      If anything, Mac boxes are even less configurable to individual tastes than Windows machines.

      Which is indeed thinking different. And better. Worse than Windows though is the stupid extent of configurability of OSS software.

      Take VLC for example. There's a vast number of options for how to display subtitles, most of them incomprehensible. Having subtitles switched off by default isn't one of them. There are entire blog posts devoted to the combination of obscure settings that you have to do to switch off subtitles by default.

      No software originating on the Mac would have such a fundamental problem. Subtitles options would be a a small, manageable number, all of them understandable by people who weren't the developers of the app, and switching subtitles off and on would be obvious.

    18. Re:definitions matter by cyber-vandal · · Score: 1

      No it isn't and you know it. It requires a great deal of farting around with no guarantee of success or of all the hardware working and, unless things have changed recently there's no dual boot facility so you basically have a less functional device that may or may not run faster. That is of course assuming that CM supports your tablet or phone at all.

      On my netbook I have Android, Windows and Linux and they all work fine. I didn't have to connect my netbook to another computer, flash a custom ROM to get root and then flash a less functional OS over the one that works fine.

      I'm sick of the post-PC delusionists around here. I own a tablet, a laptop and a smart phone because they fulfil two different requirements. That is the reality, not your one device fits all idea.

    19. Re:definitions matter by houghi · · Score: 1

      PC used to be Personal Computer indeed. Perhaps it is better to look at PC as Personal ComputING. That way you include all computing devices. Be it a computer, tablet, laptop, AndroidTV or Raperberry Pi.
      Or whatever for that matter.
      The hardware is so overlapping that it is very hard to put it in a box.

      I have a 46" TV. I have no cable. I use it to watch movies over my network to which it is connected.
      I have a 24" monitor. I have a MK80X connected to it to watch movies over my network connected to it.
      So basically the same function, yet one would be called a TV, the other a computer. And the overlap does not stop there. My NAS can compile software and I run Linux on it, yet it is a NAS and not a PC.

      So with all this PC (or PCD) for Personal Computing Device would cover all those things. I owned watches that were a PCD.

      --
      Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
    20. Re:definitions matter by lexman098 · · Score: 1

      Great distinction. This is why I still read slashdot.

      Also, you're right that technically the "PC" as in "IBM PC" is dieing, but what they've come to mean by "PC" is just "personal computer"; as in: "the computing device that you do all your electronic work with." The end of the "IBM PC compatible" era is still interesting, however. It just doesn't grab headlines.

    21. Re:definitions matter by AvitarX · · Score: 1

      I see A LOT of work being done on tablets (with remote desktop to a server). When I say a lot, I mean in dollar figure, but intellectual work, nothing that needs real power, composition and reviewing things.

      New yorker covers have been done on iPads, drawing in general is quite nice on an iPad, not as good as a really nice tablet, but pretty damned good (I think Penny Arcade has been done on a Windows 8 tablet recently too).

      The Gorillas did an album using one if I'm not mistaken. Things are changing rapidly. Additionally, I'd predict that most office computers are mainly used for tasks more resembling consumption than composition.

      Now this isn't to say they aren't a different thing, and it's not a MAJOR shift and separate category, I agree with that, it's just that I see a lot of computers going away (I have three friends that don't own one anymore, and I barely use mine, we all barrow a work laptop periodically (especially if needing to bring work home), I do so more than I use my own laptop, which basically lies under my bed closed for weeks at a time (replaced with a tablet, a PS3, and a phone).

      --
      Wow, sent an e-mail as suggested when clicking on "use classic" banner, and got a fast response that addressed my msg
    22. Re:definitions matter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      WOW you define words based on what you LIKE? And apparently you've ignorant of the fact that many devices can be unlocked and you can install whatever you want on them.
       
      You cannot do whatever you want with them. A lot of commercial software will not run on a device that's been rooted.

    23. Re:definitions matter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      not the computer we know and love here on Slashdot

      You CLAIM to speak for all slashdot users, but really you speak of the raw newbies who think computers come in a small metal box with an Intel sticker on it.

      Er. ad hominem much? you have nothing of value to add but strawman arguments and you think you won? Hahaha.

      There ARE experienced users on here who much would rather use a 'small metal box with an intel sticker on it' because they can get more use out of it

      unless you like Vendor Lock-in and being told what you can and cannot run on said devices.

      WOW you define words based on what you LIKE? And apparently you've ignorant of the fact that many devices can be unlocked and you can install whatever you want on them.

      Not for long, the RIAA and MPAA are already fighting to make that an offense, don't believe me? Google it!

      Here, I'll get you started

      http://www.networkworld.com/community/toolshed/jailed-jailbreaking-new-law-could-land-you-slammer
      http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2013/01/the-most-ridiculous-law-of-2013-so-far-it-is-now-a-crime-to-unlock-your-smartphone/272552/

    24. Re:definitions matter by Art3x · · Score: 1

      As far as I'm concerned PC derives from IBM PC. It's a PC if it's an IBM PC, a clone, or one of it's descendants. So it's CPU will be in on of the x86 compatible descendants. And it's firmware will be BIOS, or one of it's descendants such as UEFI (that emulates BIOS for compatibility.)

      The rule of thumb is that a PC is a machine that can run the x86 build of DOS and/or Windows natively.

      ARM based tablets are not PCs. iPad is not a PC. Android tablets aren't PCs. The Microsoft Surface that runs Windows RT isn't a PC. The one that runs Windows 8 is a PC.

      Then the decline of the PC is good news.

    25. Re:definitions matter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And Pluto's not a planet.

    26. Re:definitions matter by Sockatume · · Score: 1

      "IBM PC" was derived from "PC", not the other way around. It was originally assigned to things like Commodore machines and Macs. And if everyone transitions over to ARM for some reason they won't stop being personal computers.

      --
      No kidding!!! What do you say at this point?
    27. Re:definitions matter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My TV has more computing power than the PC I learned to code on, better graphics, more RAM the works. There are probably microwaves with more computing power. However, the term PC has become synonymous with the box that you stick under your desk with lots of cables. Sales of that box has declined. It's not surprising, I welcome it in fact. They are too expensive and overpowered to use to check your email and watch a youtube video. Now with the introduction of cheap ass tablets that even the moderately poor can afford it allows even more people access to the wealth of information on the internet. Which is a GOOD thing. The PC will never die - someone somewhere needs to code the applications for the tablets, needs the power of multiple cores because he needs to run multiple applications, and then there are the PC gamers, who will never go away. Consoles are nice and all, but for gaming, give me a PC.

    28. Re:definitions matter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Blah, blah Appletard loves Macs, hates FOSS/Linux, yes we know, just shove it up your ass and change the record.

    29. Re:definitions matter by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      "IBM PC" was derived from "PC", not the other way around. It was originally assigned to things like Commodore machines and Macs.

      The term Personal Computer was certainly used before the IBM PC. Alongside Home Computer and Microcomputer. Indeed Personal Computer was written on the front of the Commodore PET. But the abbreviation PC, not so much. And after the IBM PC was almost always used exclusively for machines compatible with that architecture and it's derivatives. As for Macs, they were usually contrasted with PCs, rather than being included under the term. And that's only really changed with the Intel Macs that can indeed run X86 Windows natively.

      And if everyone transitions over to ARM for some reason they won't stop being personal computers.

      If you like. But IMO they won't be PCs.

  6. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The PC is here to stay. What we are seeing is a longer life cycle. There is no need to update the hardware these days, there's plenty of power and storage for people writing the odd letter/email, social media and most games. Unless you're a developer or working with huge amounts of media data, PC users aren't going to notice a shit load of RAM, loads of cores CPU and a GPU capable of real-time Avatar level of rendering.

  7. needs vs wants by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I wonder how much of this is due to the cost associated with buying a new PC. It seemed for a long time there, that folks would buy a new PC at the drop of a hat (slow, virus, 2 years old...). I doubt that it has anything to do with smartphones, or we'd just see the same trend with tossing out smartphones at the drop of a hat.

    1. Re:needs vs wants by alen · · Score: 3, Interesting

      it has everything to do with smartphones and tablets

      a family needs only 1 PC in the now. but a smartphone or tablet for every member on average. lots of kids starting around 9 get their own smartphones. earlier than that for ipads

    2. Re:needs vs wants by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is true, who couldn't figure out in the 90's that most idiots just want a computer to browse the internet and chat? Tablets and phones do this now. I used to think back then, most people wouldn't even care about a computer if it wasn't for the internet and chatting. Once tablets and phones came along that could do this the PC was going back to be used by people who actually know what a computer can do other than porn.

  8. Win 8 adoption by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I wouldn't be surprised that Windows 8 was a large culprit as well. I don't know anyone with a favorable view of the OS, besides the Microsoft PR department. They have been hitting home runs with XBone and Win8.

  9. No Mention of Windows 8 by tuppe666 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    No mention of the fact that Intel and Microsoft are still bleeding customers on gross margins of 70%. Computers have to compete against other computing devices, and they are not doing so on price. Windows 8 being a tablet OS is the nail in the coffin.

    1. Re: No Mention of Windows 8 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Amen!

      You can't buy a general purpose pc retail now. They all have Win8 and UEFI BIOS which means they won't even boot Win7 or Linux

    2. Re: No Mention of Windows 8 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your post doesn't make any sense at all. UEFI is not a BIOS as you say and it is also not safeboot

    3. Re:No Mention of Windows 8 by snadrus · · Score: 1

      Agreed. We need specific terms like "non-Win8-only-x86" and "Windows 8 compatible." Anything can be a tablet or have a keyboard now, but the control & use depends on the hardware.

      Microsoft's XBox line actually has done a lot to lure game makers away from Windows & further the x86 decline. Now it's only legacy software & yet-to-be-ported software that Windows runs as there's not much new development there. (Lack of) Economies of scale are taking its toll on all of x86.

      Either Tablets will be it and the "follow MS" hardware makers will accept their decline, or there will be a Linux x86 backlash (which I'm not expecting), and there's no reason for even Android to push for it since it just helps Intel/Windows.

      --
      Science & open-source build trust from peer review. Learn systems you can trust.
    4. Re:No Mention of Windows 8 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Either Tablets will be it and the "follow MS" hardware makers will accept their decline, or there will be a Linux x86 backlash (which I'm not expecting), and there's no reason for even Android to push for it since it just helps Intel/Windows.

      How does an Linux x86 backlash help Windows? That makes no sense at all..

  10. My PC by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just still works.. But I guess I should go buy a new one now before the specs go into a slump :/

  11. It isn't tablets by dreamchaser · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The main reason for the decline of PC sales is that PC's have gotten to the point where their useful life is far longer than it used to be. Other than bleeding edge gamers and enthusiasts, there is just no need to upgrade as often as people once did. The same applies more or less to businesses.

    Nearly every person I know who owns a smartphone and/or a tablet also has some sort of PC. I really don't think the portable device boom is the culprit here.

    1. Re:It isn't tablets by dkleinsc · · Score: 2

      Nearly every person I know who owns a smartphone and/or a tablet also has some sort of PC.

      Well, what do you expect, when "nearly every person I know" consists of "my mother".

      --
      I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
    2. Re:It isn't tablets by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's power (performance) and then there's power (energy).

      The future is to make PCs that aren't so much more powerful in terms of performance, but do the same things more efficiently and more conveniently.

      The PC market is not as doomed as some people think.

    3. Re:It isn't tablets by dreamchaser · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      You have no clue about my life or who I know. Most of my friends and acquaintances are not IT people. Some of us have lives outside of IT. If you don't I'm sorry, but that doesn't apply to me. Your retort was WORSE than USELESS.

    4. Re:It isn't tablets by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nearly every person I know who owns a smartphone and/or a tablet also has some sort of PC.

      "Acquaintance of a slashdot user" is probably the WORST way to pick a statistical sample, your anecdote is WORSE than USELESS.

      Is it really WORSE than USELESS?
      Seems like a pretty reasonable anecdote to me. I'd be kinda surprised if someone owned a tablet/smartphone but no PC/laptop, that's a little unusual.

    5. Re:It isn't tablets by xgerrit · · Score: 2

      Nearly every person I know who owns a smartphone and/or a tablet also has some sort of PC. I really don't think the portable device boom is the culprit here.

      Maybe it's servers? How fast I could search my email used to be limited by my computer's cpu speed, but now it's limited by whatever is in Google's server rack. The computer upgrade cycle is being replaced by server-side-services, where I'm no longer responsible for the maintaining and upgrading.

      I'd love to see a graph of the last 5 years of pc shipments vs. the last 5 years of servers.

    6. Re:It isn't tablets by jedidiah · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      Sometimes, the only suitable response to a jackass is to be "anti-social".

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  12. No software exists to justify buying new hardware. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Even hardcore gamers don't need to upgrade anything right now. There's no need.

    The game industry has killed most of the game-side innovation due to the mergers and tunnel vision on anti-piracy and now nothing is pushing the envelope that would typically have driven gamers to buy the latest hardware to run the latest games.

  13. Average Consumers Pick a Communication Device by BoRegardless · · Score: 2

    So why pick a more expensive & less mobile PC?

    1. Re:Average Consumers Pick a Communication Device by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most teenagers will automatically think, why do I need a PC when my new smartphone can browse the net and also with smart tvs and now even the Xbox can use Internet Explorer, the demand should expect to fall for PCs.

      The only teenagers that buy PCs these days are the geeks and the hardcore gamers.

  14. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by MetalliQaZ · · Score: 5, Insightful

    That is a truly misguided statement. Here's a better one:

    "Consumers use touch screens. Producers use keyboards."

    Good luck using a tablet for tasks such as Photoshop or Blender. Heck, even using a tablet to type out a proper letter could be classified as cruel and inhumane.

    The era of the PC is not over... only the era of the PC as an entertainment device.

    --
    "Here Lies Philip J. Fry, named for his uncle, to carry on his spirit"
  15. PCs are not going to die. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What worries me is that if the PC market can't continuing making profit off volume sales, the prices of a computer (or its components) will go up. I'm still on core 2 due (hey, still works), and waiting for it to die so I can build something with 8-core.

    1. Re:PCs are not going to die. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This. They can end up going up to the point that only businesses can afford them, and if companies insist with pushing for BYOD and using apps for the work, they may become so expensive that they may only become feasible for servers.

    2. Re:PCs are not going to die. by hairyfeet · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Kinda doubt it, with the chips an idle fab is still gonna cost a pretty penny and I think he have reached pretty damned close to the limits on die shrinks, so they'll still crank out enough chips that I doubt prices will climb much beyond what we see now.

      But as someone down in the trenches those pundits with their "Death of the PC,grandma is buying tablets" bullshit? hey morons, it was a BUBBLE and like all bubbles it had to burst, what we are seeing now at around 200-400 million units a year is the NORMAL STATE, its only the bubble that is over. this is as stupid as somebody saying "Well you can't flip houses for instant 40% profit anymore,houses must be dying". Its total horseshit.

      For those that missed the memo the MHz wars created a bubble, with single core speeds so easy for your even less than average programmer able to take advantage of we went from a pre-bubble lifespan of 5-7 years for a PC to one where a PC would be damned lucky if it lasted even 3 because the chips were advancing so fast a PC that was just 2 years old would struggle to run the latest programs. When we switched to cores because taking advantage of SMP is anything BUT easy, with many programs simply not able to thread, and the number of cores jumping so fast? The programs quickly got blown away by the hardware.

      I mean look at what my cheapest build was FIVE years ago...Phenom or Athlon X3 with 4GB of RAM and 500GB HDDs...how many folks will be able to slam that setup enough to need a new one? I have a customer that does extremely intricate Solidworks robot design on a Phenom I X3 and he is happy as a clam with the performance. even myself, who is the major multitasker and rarely have less than 4 things running at once and who built a new PC every year and a half like clockwork, what am I running? A 4 year old Phenom X6 with 8GB of RAM and 3TB of HDD space which no matter how much I throw at it has cycles to spare so other than the GPU upgrade I'll be getting in the fall why would I build a new one? On the mobile side I lucked into one of those AMD E350 netbooks, gets nearly 5 hours on its 3 year old battery and does 1080P over HDMI, why would I buy a bulky new full size?

      So despite the "sky is falling ZOMFG!" articles that I'm half convinced is being encouraged by Ballmer trying to burn MSFT to the ground by forcing them to become Apple (like folks are gonna pay $1000+ for walled Windows gardens, not likely fat boy) PCs aren't going anywhere, now that the bubble is burst folks will just be going back to the 5-7 year cycle. if anything not only have I not met a single person that is "getting rid of the PC" (and since I'm supplementing my PC work with home theater I'd have plenty of opportunities) but its the opposite, even the kids have their own PCs, they have PCs up the ying yang...which is of course why they aren't buying as many, because that 6 year old Pentium D or first gen Athlon X2 still surfs the web just fine,runs Win 7 just fine,so why fix what I ain't broke?

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    3. Re:PCs are not going to die. by Joce640k · · Score: 4, Insightful

      This. They can end up going up to the point that only businesses can afford them.

      On the plus side, we might be able to move away from the awful glossy-widesceen-with-awful-keyboard models that the public have been forcing on us for the last few years.

      --
      No sig today...
    4. Re:PCs are not going to die. by dc29A · · Score: 1

      If you can do your computing fine on a Core 2 Duo, why in the name of Jeebus you need an 8 core monster?

    5. Re:PCs are not going to die. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Android touch screen PC's at cheap prices would restart PC sales big time.

    6. Re:PCs are not going to die. by unixisc · · Score: 1

      Kinda doubt it, with the chips an idle fab is still gonna cost a pretty penny and I think he have reached pretty damned close to the limits on die shrinks, so they'll still crank out enough chips that I doubt prices will climb much beyond what we see now.

      But once a fab has depreciated, and assuming that its equipment doesn't get replaced by new equipment for the next die shrink, the chips that it runs are just there to keep the fab running, and if its utilization is optimal, then the costs are good as well. As the processes hit the limit on die shrinks, you will see a point where chips get to a stable price, and don't change from there on. And that's what the market will begin to see - an end to Moore's law, and a total stabilization on prices. At which point, you will see a steady flow of product off the shelves all the time, and no growth as such, since everybody who needs computers has them.

    7. Re:PCs are not going to die. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I said it works, not that it works fine. ;)

    8. Re:PCs are not going to die. by malvcr · · Score: 1, Insightful

      When the prices depend on quantity and all the people that can purchase a good computer already have one, then the sales are doomed. There are several solutions to this dilemma:

      --- Create "almost good" computers that will work for you only for a while. Let's see. ... cheaper netbooks with slow processors and limited storage. Oh, this was already done, but makers like to sell them as the notebooks the really are not.
      --- Create "disposable" devices. This is how the printer business is shaped. They could work more time, but their chips decide not to continue working ... fill the planet with trash and doom yourself or your descendants in the future.
      --- Create "durable" machines, making them more expensive in the first moment, but cheaper on the long term. And develop an "update and DIY repairing business" around it. Again, as the printers industry, do $$$ with the ink, not with the printer, or the car industry do with their regular checkpoints and the replacement part industry. Try to be "the dentist".
      --- Order your goals. Mobile, Desktop ... break the separations between them, the truth is that there is a limited quantity of people on this planet and no mater how attractive you paint the image, when all them have what they need, no need to have more. If you are a serious user, what is the "real" difference between an iPhone4 and an iPhone5? ... both do their jobs well ... the same for Samsung S3 and S4, etc.
      --- Sell what you can sell ... do added value on top of that. This industry is so extremely disordered that is a miracle we are still alive. Let's see ... Windows native format for external hard disks NTFS ... OSX native format for external hard disks HPFS+ ... Windows can't read HPFS+, OSX can write NTFS disks ... there is no technical reason for this difference because Linux read whatever and write wherever ... pure ego.

      Yeah, there are solutions ... but people need to think better their ways of doing the things.

      Last economic crisis is not a joke, and how the ice is melting in our poles neither. The industries can't continue selling as they are doing now, this is nonsense.

    9. Re:PCs are not going to die. by dsvick · · Score: 3, Funny

      Really? Let me know if you still think that after you've been waving your arms in the air in front of your monitor for about 10 minutes.

    10. Re:PCs are not going to die. by Gr8Apes · · Score: 1

      I agree that component prices will stay relatively steady, but PC prices will go up. The cut-rate manufacturers can no longer count on increasing quantity to improve their profits, so they are going to have to increase prices or reduce costs.

      In the past, there was roughly a 2 year cycle for PCs. I'd say now that many are 3-4 years, mainly due to failing parts, which impacts new sales yet again. You're right that a Core 2 Duo / Athlon X3 or better chip with 4GB or more RAM is all the majority of folks need for browsing, email, and whatever else they're doing. For me, only video stresses my significantly better hardware, or load tests, neither of which 90+% of the population would engage in. I could use more, but I don't need more, and probably will not replace or even improve this current desktop as long as everything continues to work. If I need more CPU power, I'll probably look to grids, not a bigger desktop.

      --
      The cesspool just got a check and balance.
    11. Re:PCs are not going to die. by Culture20 · · Score: 1

      Build a 24-32 core workstation now and call it a day. The cycle will revert to desktops again after several years.

    12. Re:PCs are not going to die. by Belial6 · · Score: 1

      Why would you do that? Android handles a mouse and keyboard just fine. The touch screen would only be for things that are easeir done by touch. You sound like the people that though using a mouse meant clicking CLI commands out on an on-screen keyboard.

    13. Re:PCs are not going to die. by allcoolnameswheretak · · Score: 2

      [quote]In the past, there was roughly a 2 year cycle for PCs[/quote]

      Correctomondo. Except it's not just about checking email but also about one of the biggest PC sellers of the past: games. I used to by a new PC at least every 2 years to keep up with the advances in hardware just to be able to play the latest games. This process has practically come to an abrupt halt. My Athlon 64 X2 I'm typing this on is about 5 years old and it still runs the latest games on high detail without problems (on a standard 1-monitor setup). The only upgrade I performed at some point was the graphics card from a 8800 to a GTX 275.
      Only now with the next console generation coming up I'm starting to think about the next upgrade and going crazy with ultra-high resolution and graphics settings.

      I think the slowing down of the hardware performance developments are good for normal consumers and gamers alike. Hardware lasts longer and game developers are starting to focus on gameplay again instead of the shineys.

    14. Re:PCs are not going to die. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the fact you're still on a core 2 duo and hey it works is the problem. There hasn't been a giant gap where people HAVE to upgrade. Someone brought me an AMD athlon II x2 250 in an all in one yesterday. An ancient weapon from a far simpler time. Runs windows 7 like a champ and everything else they need is basic word processing, email, acrobat, play movies etc. This thing still works for that great.

    15. Re:PCs are not going to die. by cheesybagel · · Score: 1

      I have always upgraded my PC every 3-4 years. I prefer to wait until the next iteration of architecture and Moore's law happens. That takes roughly 36 months i.e. 3 years. Before I had a PC my machines lasted a lot longer. My Amiga computer lasted for like 5 years or something.

      You can do browsing and video fine with a tablet computer. The main issue is when you want to do productive input intensive tasks. Or tasks which previously required a workstation. I doubt workstation like computers will ever go away. Quite often people want to have the same performance they have on a server on a desktop in order to be able to program for those platforms. They may get more expensive however.

    16. Re:PCs are not going to die. by lgw · · Score: 2

      Given a proper desk, chair, keyboard, mouse, and large monitor at arms length, there's nothing easier to do by touch. Touch can be handy when the screen is the keyboard, or is attached to the keyboard, but not so much in a proper workstation.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    17. Re:PCs are not going to die. by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      All I can say, from a purely anecdotal position, is that the two PCs in our house almost never get used. I bought my wife a Kobo Arc for Christmas for e-reading, and within a couple of weeks she stopped using her notebook for anything other than the odd big email or document. I still use mine for working from home (mainly coding and management), but still, I prefer my Nexus 7 for reading and casual computing.

      If a fair chunk of users are in the same boat my family is in, about the only time we will replace our PCs is when they croak, and considering how little they're used now compared to a year ago, I'd say that could be quite a while.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    18. Re:PCs are not going to die. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      BS. I do a lot of 3D modelling and there are many instances where touchscreen controls would be much easier than having to use keyboard and mouse combinations.

    19. Re:PCs are not going to die. by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 1

      you will see a point where chips get to a stable price, and don't change from there on.

      Yes but given the fact that the price of computer chips is almost entirely the price of R&D to design the chips and the initial investment of building a fab, that stable price will be almost 0.

      The material costs of a CPU are almost zero. The skilled human labor is used to design new chips and upgrade fabs for the new designs. If the designs stay the same, the fabs can stay the same. The only skilled human labor will be to repair the machines when they break. The only unskilled labor will be to put the finished products into the trucks.

      The only reason this didn't already happen is because it was cheaper to spend a lot of money on a more efficient cpu in order to save money on electricity costs. Once we hit a wall (even if it is temporary), we will see prices drop dramatically as "the best we can do (for now)" requires almost no additional human effort.

      Then once some new innovation comes out as the result of some crazy R&D, like home quantum computers or 3D chips/memory, or graphene flux capacitors, then the price will jump back up to recoup R&D costs and pay for futurue improvements.

    20. Re:PCs are not going to die. by Mashiki · · Score: 1

      Well it's been pointed out before, that gaming is a huge driver. In turn, when things were bleeding edge a decade ago. It was games driving hardware, faster GPU's, faster CPU's, RAM with better response times, and so on. Now a days, with large numbers of developers sucking on the console market that's slowing down the hardware push to a crawl. In many cases you're developing games for 10 year old hardware. Which of course is right around that Athlon64/Intel Duo core setup, with a low-to-midrange video card. And for that, you don't need bleeding-edge or even a previous generation to make a go of it. Unless it's a very poor port.

      People don't like to think that it was gaming that was pushing hardware, but it was. And with the "next generation" of consoles, and I use that term loosely...being that it's still 3-4 years behind what we have in the PC market, it'll continue to stagnate. 7 years ago I would have replaced my videocard on the "every-other" generation movement. Today, I know I can get my 560ti to last until the 800 series or AMD-ATI equivalent comes out. And if, for whatever reason I decide I don't want to buy an 800 series, I'll just wait for the mid-highend 700 series to go on sale and save myself an extra $100-150 or more, and know I'll still be good.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    21. Re:PCs are not going to die. by Belial6 · · Score: 1

      If everything was easier with a mouse, we all wouldn't have had to spend so much time slapping people's hands away from touching our monitors.

    22. Re:PCs are not going to die. by lgw · · Score: 1

      The only time I've ever seen that apply is 2-people-1-mouse, and no one wants to see that in the first place.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    23. Re:PCs are not going to die. by Belial6 · · Score: 1

      Your falling prey to the "My use case must be THE use case." fallacy.

    24. Re:PCs are not going to die. by ArsonSmith · · Score: 1

      I haven't bought a new PC in almost 20 years. Sure I've upgraded the modem, network card, sound card, motherboard, memory, cpu, video card, monitor, keyboard, mouse, case, hard drive, ssd, and individually all several times in that 20 years, but it's been one continuous computer.

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
    25. Re:PCs are not going to die. by TeknoHog · · Score: 2

      As a completely meaningless anecdote, I noticed that Core 2 Duo T7200 at 2.0 GHz is 70% faster than Core i5 M520 at 2.4 GHz, when benchmarking the Lucas-Lehmer test for Mersenne primes. I understand that this does not reflect the full, practical performance of either CPU model, and certainly says nothing about energy efficiency. (Both are 'mobile' processors though, and they run very cool and quiet, especially after undervolting.)

      In other words, newer does not mean absolutely faster or otherwise better. One particular factor in hardware development is latency, which tends to stay quite same despite throughput improvements. For example, with DDR -> DDR2 -> DDR3 etc. the latency in clock cycles tends to increase in proportion with frequency, IOW the actual timed latency stays about the same.

      "Why people think "performace" means "throughput" is something I'll never understand. Throughput is _always_ secondary to latency, and really only becomes interesting when it becomes a latency number (ie "I need higher throughput in order to process these jobs in 4 hours instead of 8" - notice how the real issue was again about _latency_)." -- Linus Torvalds

      --
      Escher was the first MC and Giger invented the HR department.
    26. Re:PCs are not going to die. by Gr8Apes · · Score: 1

      You can do browsing and video fine with a tablet computer.

      For viewing? Sure. Editing? Not a chance. I'm looking at potentially going grid for video, and you would too when you're waiting 2 hours to render 60 min of HD video, provided, of course, your video software supports grids.

      The main issue is when you want to do productive input intensive tasks. Or tasks which previously required a workstation. I doubt workstation like computers will ever go away. Quite often people want to have the same performance they have on a server on a desktop in order to be able to program for those platforms. They may get more expensive however.

      This was my point - these are the people that need desktops. They are not going away. Even the most basic of current hardware will handle all the normal tasks and even play quite a few games.

      --
      The cesspool just got a check and balance.
    27. Re:PCs are not going to die. by Gr8Apes · · Score: 1

      Games drove buying cycles, not hardware. Hardware drove game developers to produce higher resolution / more capable games, not the other way around. Because having better shadows, more realistic lighting, better surround sound, higher frame rates to smooth motion, etc, sold more copies of your game vs your competitors, as people like shiney.

      We've been stagnant for about 8 years, since we could do 100 fps at 1920x1080 at 16M color depth, with anti-aliasing. The shiney started fading, so there was no point. Most wouldn't fork over 1K+ for the next higher set of monitors, so we were at a dead end for a while. Now that 4K monitors may be coming soon and driving down prices, I'll bet you'll see a new wave of games going for the shiney.

      --
      The cesspool just got a check and balance.
    28. Re:PCs are not going to die. by InvalidError · · Score: 1

      PC sales will continue.

      The form factors, price points, performance points, replacement frequency, etc. on the other hand will change.

      All-in-ones used to be little more than a gimmick because they used to be grossly under-powered and non-upgradable which made them generally undesirable. Today, even entry-level AiO "oversized tablets" are over-powered for most people's needs so I am expecting them to be a fair bit more popular this time around.

      I also expect PC-based "transformable" tablets (with keyboard/battery/optical/IO/charger dock) to give ultrabooks, nettops, laptops and low-end desktops a run for their money.

      Still technically PCs, just different form factors.

      However, I do expect total PC and PC-equivalent sales to continue decreasing over time due to the sheer number of alternate devices (Android-based phones, tablets, smart-TVs, game consoles, PC-on-a-stick, proprietary game consoles, etc.) that can be used for media consumption and menial tasks that account for the bulk of what non-technical non-gamer PC users tend to use their PCs for.

    29. Re:PCs are not going to die. by Mashiki · · Score: 1

      Fair point, time will tell. Though I was in the reseller industry from '97-03, and saw most of the trends first hand. As with everything, we'll see.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    30. Re:PCs are not going to die. by teh+dave · · Score: 1

      My Athlon 64 X2 I'm typing this on is about 5 years old and it still runs the latest games on high detail without problems (on a standard 1-monitor setup).

      Yeah, but no. When you say "latest games", do you mean the latest release of Bejewled? You can't play some of the latest games on an Athlon X4, let alone an X2. You tried throwing Battlefield 3 at your machine? Guarantee you won't get 20fps. My Q6600 was too weak to handle BF3 even when paired with a GTX 670 (CPU would be pegged at 100% the whole time and audio would cut in and out), and BF3 is two years old!

      The only upgrade I performed at some point was the graphics card from a 8800 to a GTX 275.

      And you're still running the 275? I had a 280 when I first started playing modern games like BF3 and Crysis 2, and averaged about 35fps. That's just awful. Heck, you can't eke more than about 40fps on the first Crysis on a 280, and that game is from 2007!

    31. Re:PCs are not going to die. by mjwx · · Score: 1

      Correctomondo. Except it's not just about checking email but also about one of the biggest PC sellers of the past: games. I used to by a new PC at least every 2 years to keep up with the advances in hardware just to be able to play the latest games. This process has practically come to an abrupt halt. My Athlon 64 X2 I'm typing this on is about 5 years old and it still runs the latest games on high detail without problems (on a standard 1-monitor setup). The only upgrade I performed at some point was the graphics card from a 8800 to a GTX 275.

      This,

      I also used to upgrade every 2 years religiously and computer components were a lot more expensive (I used to drop A$2000-2500 for a moderately high end rig, now A$1500 buys a good high end rig and A$2000 buys the ducks nuts). But since my last rig bought in 2009 (Phenom II 955, 8 GB RAM, Geforce 285) I've only paid for 3 upgrades, an SSD, a Geforce 660 and a Wireless N card.

      The fact is, games simply dont challenge it any more. Even with the terrible inefficiency of DX10/11 nothing pushes my gaming rig to the limits. Where's our Crysis? Hell, a poorly coded 2013 game cant even push my old gaming rig to the limits any more.

      The only reason I'd recommend upgrading a 5 yr old gaming rig is if for some strange reason it didn't support SSD's.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
    32. Re:PCs are not going to die. by allcoolnameswheretak · · Score: 1

      I suppose we have different expectations on what is acceptable performance. I'm okay with anything over 24fps while you deem 35fps 'awful'. :)
      I usually don't buy games on release. I prefer to lag behind and wait for special offers before I buy, saves a lot of $$$. This might also be a factor. So when I talk about the 'latest' games I'm talking about Skyrim, GTA IV, Civ V, etc. I've also played the Crysis 2 demo without problems, but maybe the graphics quality was on "medium". Still looked pretty good.

      The only game I bought recently that I've actually put away because I wasn't satisfied with performance on my system was "Sleeping Dogs". It's playable on medium settings, but the high settings look so much better that I prefer to wait for my next hardware upgrade.

    33. Re:PCs are not going to die. by hairyfeet · · Score: 2

      Exactly and as I pointed out we have just about reached the limits of die shrinks because of electron leakage so barring some amazing new material most of the R&D will end up going to performance per watt and improving what they already have.

      I mean put yourself in the shoes of one of my average customers. They walk into the shop,see the triples and quads, see the dual core laptops...do you REALLY think they will give a rat's ass if the chip inside was made at 45nm,32nm,or 22nm? Nope all they care about is "Will it do what I want it to do?" and since the answer is "yes with power to spare" they are just happy little campers. hell I've been sticking with the Athlons and Phenom IIs because of how cheap I've been getting them, think folks care if that new quad is the latest and greatest in chip design? Nope they are happy they have a new kick butt system to plug into their widescreen and do their stuff on, that is all.

      So honestly if Intel and AMD both stopped R&D tomorrow it really wouldn't matter to the end user, they both have a chip that fits just about any budget or job the user has, and they can go as high as hexacore on the Intel side or octocore on the AMD side, which is serious overkill for...well pretty much all but a handful of guys. Even me who is a multitasking fool has found my AMD hexacore can do so much work per cycle that it always seems to be dropping into ULV mode waiting for more work from me and when i want to go nuts it can transcode a DVD to AVI and burn a disc AND play my games, no problemo. Why should I care that AMD has an octocore chip out that is 2 gen newer when my hexacore 1035T, which cost a grand total of $105 BTW, has more cycles than I can use?

      Finally both Intel and AMD have found that they can use that spare fab capacity (yes i know AMD is now fabless but its common knowledge that the fabs give priority to their best customers) to make the cheap ULV chips like Atom and Bobcat/Jaguar and because those chips are so cheap to make and the OEMs snap them up (especially the AMD APUs, pretty much every sub $350 laptop around here is a Bobcat based) they can keep those fabs humming and with the low cost per chip they can make damned good money off of those. Between Celeron/Pentium and Bobcat/Jaguar/Trinity both companies can still make good money and keep the fabs running, they are a sunk cost after all.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    34. Re:PCs are not going to die. by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      Mind some advice friend? Look at the AMD hexas, especially the Phenom IIs, you can score them crazy cheap if you look around and can get a damned good gaming board from a company like Asrock (Asus and Asrock are one now BTW, with the Asus side mainly laptop and Asrock mainly desktop) for dirt cheap, really great way to get a nice gaming rig for little green. Pair it with an HD7750 or HD7770, hell get a CF enabled board like mine and by this fall you'll be able to score double HD7750s for around $120 and you'll be smoking.

      But do NOT toss that Athlon X2 system, still plenty of uses for that baby. You can underclock it and it'll make a great low power HTPC or you can go to starmicro and either squeeze some more performance out by getting a cheap upgrade or if you want to go the HTPC route I'd recommend the 4850E which is just 45w at 2.5Ghz so it makes a great whisper quiet HTPC. Slap the old board into something like one of the cheap VCR style cases on amazon and tada! Slick HTPC that looks great and runs like a champ!

      I have to say having the hardware cycle slow down has been fine by me, i can still sell plenty of HTPCs and having the GPU turnover slow down means its cheaper than ever to give my customers a gaming upgrade. Hell me and my boys have been gaming the last 3 years on HD4850s, they cost just $60 a pop at the time (and can be found for as little as $35 online now) and despite our love of shooters they have been kicking the behind. I'll be upgrading us to the HD7750s or HD7770s this fall NOT because our games need it but simply for the power savings, not having to blow $100+ a GPU times three every other year has certainly been fine by me ;-)

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    35. Re:PCs are not going to die. by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      Actually friend in a way you are BOTH right but I'd add that the reason gaming slowed to a crawl was NOT because of the consoles, its because making a triple A game at current standards can easily cost $50 million plus.

      I don't remember which gaming house CEO said it (it may have been the head of Epic, maybe Crytek, not sure) but they said to really push the graphics up to the level that even the midrange hardware like an Athlon Quad or HD7750 can do right now? would shoot the cost of developing the games into $120 million plus territory and the devs simply can't afford to spend that kind of money, one flop can kill them as it is, with those kinds of numbers you can sell 5 million copies on launch day and lose money like Ubisoft did on the new Tomb Raider.

      So according to him its NOT the consoles that are holding things back, in fact he predicted we aren't gonna see a big leap with the new consoles like we did with the last one, simply because the cost to make a game with THAT high a level of graphics and physics would break the bank of any company that tried.

      BTW nice to see a former PC guy, still selling myself, but if anything the dropping prices have made it even easier to sell but these dumbo OEMs are trying to listen to MSFT and Intel and crank out Macbook clones and getting screwed. The sweet spot right now is between $350-$550 and you go past $550 at your own peril, these OEMs will learn that soon enough.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    36. Re:PCs are not going to die. by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      Not him but I gotta throw a flag, bullshit on the field. The game you cite is frankly notorious for being a giant pig, no different than the Crytek games when it comes to wasting cycles, and most folks aren't gonna base their entire gaming exp around BF 3.

      I can tell you my youngest loves games like the Borderlands series, along with huge MMORPGs and his 3.3Ghz Athlon X3 with an HD4850 cranks the purty just fine, and I'm playing the Bioshock series, the Saints Row games, the Crytek games, Deus Ex HR, Serious Sam 3 BFE (Had to grab the Humble Bundle, gotta love me some Sam I Am) and most of the time my AMD hexacore is running in triple core mode with again an HD4850 and on my single monitor? Looks fricking great. I even have an Athlon X3 and HD4850 set up in the shop to show people what kind of games they can play on their TV with a PC, I have Just Cause II loaded on it and all it takes is me planting a half a dozen C4s and doing the "cool guys don't look at explosions" bit while these huge gasoline fires blow and smokestacks fall for it to be an easy sale.

      So if you are gonna be judging systems you really need to use something besides Battle Fatass 3, that would be like judging a system based on how it run the carrier bit in Crysis that is so badly coded there is a fan made patch just to turn down that single spot because even the ultra high end cards would have graphical glitches on that shit. But hey, if having a big ePeen makes you happy? Who am I to judge ;-)

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    37. Re:PCs are not going to die. by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      If ALL you are doing is passively consuming? Sure that will work fine...most folks aren't just passive consumers though friend.

      Take my GF's roommate for an example, I call her "That girl" (short for "that loudmouthed nosy girl") so we'll call her that. That girl bought a tablet...never uses it,why? She found that while it would let her passively surf or look at her email, when it came to replying or playing her FB games or chatting with her friends? It really REALLY sucked ass for that. and it isn't like she is what anybody would call a "hardcore" user by any stretch, her idea of "gaming" is that little flower growing game (or as i call it "Hamster push the button and gets a pellet") but she found that thanks to her roomie having a BF that knows PCs it cost her next to nothing to get an HDMI cable and wireless keyboard/mouse setup and now she can kick back all comfy and do everything she wants so the tablet sits in the box.

      so from what I'm seeing not very many folks fit your anecdote, too many want to tweet, chat on FB, play their little games, write emails AND do the passive stuff and honestly? even with the BT keyboard frankly those little ARM jobbies I've found to be just too underpowered to be anything but irritating, like trying to watch a movie on a cellphone while you CAN do it most would find it seriously wanting.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    38. Re:PCs are not going to die. by TsuruchiBrian · · Score: 1

      The only issue would be if one of them stops R&D and the other is able to make a new chip that has like twice the performance per watt. If that happens, then even if the older chip is free, the electricity savings of the new chip can make it a better long term investment even if it costs $200.

    39. Re:PCs are not going to die. by lsatenstein · · Score: 2

      This. They can end up going up to the point that only businesses can afford them.

      On the plus side, we might be able to move away from the awful glossy-widesceen-with-awful-keyboard models that the public have been forcing on us for the last few years.

      ===
      To the contrary, I see pcs as a thriving market. A tablet has to be carried. You cannot put too much into a tablet. A physical keyboard and multitasking are required for productivity.
      With SDDs becoming larger capacity and more reliable, the spinning platter will be reserved for back end storage. As my age and my eyes age with me, I need large screens. For productivity, I have two screens on my desk. Am I the exception for a home system? Perhaps, but not in offices in areas where finance, programming, design take place. And if I work from home, I need those tools too. So, the laptop will fold into the tablet, but the PC will live on.

      And Linux will progress slowly to meet requirements for the small shops. The big guys will stay with sharepoint, lyncs, Office and the business tools that MS provides. Small business will elect to work with Linux tools. And the winner will be......

      --
      Leslie Satenstein Montreal Quebec Canada
    40. Re:PCs are not going to die. by teh+dave · · Score: 1

      A "giant pig" many of today's newest games may very well be, but that doesn't change the fact that if you want to run them (like I do) then you need a beefy machine. If some of today's games are giant pigs, and you claim to have a machine that is capable of playing "the latest" games, on "high detail" and "without a problem", then if that is the truth I should be able to pick any of these "giant pigs" and run them on your machine. That's what being able to run "the latest" games on "high detail" means. Don't like BF3 for whatever reason? Fine - Skyrim. Nexuiz. Spec Ops. Deus Ex. The latest Tomb Raider. Can't run those on high detail without a problem on your machine? Then don't claim you can.

      Why do I need to choose a game other than BF3 to judge a system by? It's a reasonably popular, modern title. If you say you can run modern games but your PC struggles on BF3, then you're cherry picking.

      Also, who's to judge whether a game requires an excessive amount of grunt or whether it's "coded badly"? If I look at the CPU monitor while in the middle of BF3 it sits at around 20%. Doesn't seem excessive to me.

      ePeen? Really? My PC far from an "ePeen extension". The CPU is a bit excessive for gaming but that's not the only thing I do with the box. I only have a single video card. My SSD isn't the fastest or the highest capacity. I don't have the best anything. Many of the members of my gaming community have better machines than I do, so, if I did buy it primarily for that then I can't have done a very good job!

  16. custom PCs? by mwn3d · · Score: 0

    does this take into account people buying parts of PCs and assembling them themselves? i feel like it's gotten easier to just upgrade one or two parts rather than the whole computer now too.

    1. Re:custom PCs? by FranTaylor · · Score: 1

      i feel like it's gotten easier to just upgrade

      Why do people insist on taking their own personal anecdotes and projecting them onto the rest of the industry?

      I feel like going for a swim today, does this mean the computer industry should make a waterproof model?

    2. Re:custom PCs? by justthinkit · · Score: 1
      Good point, mwn3d. RAM upgrades have gone down in price in a way I never would have imagined. I paid more for 64KB of RAM on my first PC than people are paying today for 4 or 8GB of RAM. I don't have words to comprehend that progression. So RAM upgrades are essentially free and can definitely turn a performance dog into a performance middleweight.
      .

      Dedicated video card instead of onboard RAM is also a "zero cost" upgrade for those who want that.

      Hard drive upgrades are the same story. Imagine, we can buy a 4TB drive for $140. So that machine that came with a 1/2TB drive can get 8 times as much storage for one-third the cost of a new average PC. For similar bucks one can upgrade HD performance to 2013 levels with an SSD.

      So yes I wonder how they account for upgrades. One RAM, video or HD upgrade can equal "half a computer" upgrade, extending its life for two or three years.

      --
      I come here for the love
  17. Producers vs Consumers by tuppe666 · · Score: 1

    pc owners are the producers of content on that computer network, not tablet users

    Except its not true...real keyboard and mouse have uses, but the rise of pen+drawing screen is actually a better input for artists, hell anything where a pad beats static computer.

    As for an iPad being better for consumption....seriously my 24" monitor is so much better for consumption than a tablet for *anything* videos, web pages. games...

    The main difference is the trade between portability at the lack of some screen estate, power, storage, ease of input and it just happens in most use cases these are not as important.

    1. Re:Producers vs Consumers by lpevey · · Score: 1

      Some decent points except (IMO) for the first one. As far as I know, I can't hook my Wacom up to my iPad. And anything else is...inferior, to be polite. ;)

    2. Re:Producers vs Consumers by kaatochacha · · Score: 1

      I've got a Lenovo Thinkpad tablet 2 that includes a stylus. So in some ways , this would be like hooking up a wacom to an ipad.
      Excpet this one is win 8

  18. Not as many are needed by Tridus · · Score: 4, Insightful

    At the end of the day, we just need fewer PCs than we used to:

    - People can do their "consumption" media (browsing, videos, etc) on tablets or phones. Don't need a PC for that.
    - People who use PCs for work have no reason to upgrade them as often as they used to, as the machines last for years and real world performance gains in hardware have slowed to a trickle. When most of my software is single-threaded, upgrading from dual core to quad core (or more) does absolutely nothing for me.
    - Even gamers don't need to upgrade that often, as requirements have stopped going up unless you want the ultra quality mode. A three year old gaming PC can still play everything new at high quality, and that's never been the case in the past.

    Add it all up, and we need fewer PCs today than we used to need. The ones we do need last longer than they used to. The market isn't going to go away, but it is going to become a lot smaller.

    --
    -- "So they told me that using the download page to download something was not something they anticipated." - Bill Gates
    1. Re:Not as many are needed by Nemyst · · Score: 1

      Gamers have always been the fastest to upgrade, but the reason they've been less inclined to do so is that consoles are on a much longer cycle these days. Since games are multiplatform and designed for consoles first, you're guaranteed that a slightly beefier (to account for porting and OS overhead) computer than the console's specs will be able to play just about every game of the generation, which last 5+ years now. With a new generation coming, I'd expect a bump in gaming PC sales as people are finally forced to upgrade their old machines to play the latest games at comparative quality to consoles.

    2. Re:Not as many are needed by 0123456 · · Score: 1

      With a new generation coming, I'd expect a bump in gaming PC sales as people are finally forced to upgrade their old machines to play the latest games at comparative quality to consoles.

      Except the new consoles appear to be about as fast as a low-end PC with integrated graphics. That five-year-old gaming PC is probably just as good.

    3. Re:Not as many are needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I still need a PC for consumption media. Sure you can do Hulu and Netflix on a tablet, but the pirate video sites still all use Flash players, and tablets don't do flash. Nor are you going to torrent things directly to a tablet and expect it to play.

      Some of us do computation for our work. I can use up as much PC as you give me. Some calculations still take hours, days, weeks, or months, and things I would like done in 2 minutes might still take 15 minutes. I spend a lot of time staring at the computer unable to work because something took all my computer resources.

    4. Re:Not as many are needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > is that consoles are on a much longer cycle these days

      This has essentially been what i have been telling people when this conversation comes up.

      When the new consoles launch, i expect we might see an upturn in PC sales about 6 months later once a number of cross-platform games start getting released which actually have some decent hardware requirements.

      I'm on my computer at home gaming basically every afternoon after work, and i have been *wanting* to upgrade for about 12 months. However as most people have pointed out, i have not seen any *need* to do so at the moment, with the exception of putting in an SSD and replacing the gfx card on my >3 year old rig (which given the conversation isn't *that* old).

  19. My experience by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Me: Good morning i would like to buy a PC for the purpose of gaming which means i would require power.
    Employ: Sure you have here this lovely...
    Me: That seems to have 6 GB of RAM and also the graphic card is an old Nvidia with 1 Gig dedicated only... i would require more
    Employ: Well no one complained about gaming on this one.. its even playing currently Bioshock Infinity.
    Me: That's the trailer.... it's a FMV
    Employ: It still renders pretty fast thanks to Windows 8
    Me: Also without windows 8. I still accept 7 tho...
    Employ: Sorry no windows 7... we recalled all those for Windows 8 equivalents..
    Me: Bye

    1. Re:My experience by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I assume you mean this definition of FMV. Out of curiousity, what didn't you just say "That's the trailer.... a video"?

  20. Golden goose: dead. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is where the golden goose has been slain.

  21. It's not tablets by MpVpRb · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The main reasons that sales are dropping...

    Everybody that needs one has one, and they work well enough. Very few people need the latest and greatest

    The various different activation and protection schemes make it a royal pain to upgrade

    I used to buy new hardware frequently, and just clone my hard drive

    Now, I hold on to hardware for as long as possible

    I fear that if I upgrade, I will end up spending hours on hold waiting to convince some dude in India that I'm not a pirate

    1. Re:It's not tablets by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >I fear that if I upgrade, I will end up spending hours on hold waiting to convince some dude in India that I'm not a pirate

      That's a valid concern. The guy in India is friendly so you won't have to do much convincing, but there is a communications barrier due to his heavy accent.

  22. Longer Life Cycle by tuppe666 · · Score: 0

    The PC is here to stay. What we are seeing is a longer life cycle. There is no need to update the hardware these days,

    Hold on there why does anyone say this....I want more powerful hardware and can use it. Where is my 4X 1080P 24" touchscreen monitor, with keyboard with LED keys with these futuristic storage sizes with android compatibility...at a price I can afford. Microsoft turned the computer into a tablet...and Apple turned it into a none upgradable cylinder. At least they are still sat on massive profit margins while sales shrink, but who cares its a duopoly Anyway.

    No wonder we are all running to android.

    1. Re:Longer Life Cycle by 0100010001010011 · · Score: 2

      Why are people satisfied with 1080p. My 17" Dell laptop is 1900x1200. I want to replace it but every new dell is just 1080p and that's the upgrade they come stock with x900. I know the margins make it cheaper because of margins with all the 1080P TVs in production but jesus is a 17" laptop with more than a vertical resolution of 1080p too much to ask for?

      Love or hate Apple at least their laptops have resolution Their 13" laptops are 2560-by-1600 and The 15" laptops are 2880-by-1800. That's twice the number of pixels as a Dell 17". I really wish Apple made a 17" laptop with retina display because I would buy it in a second.

    2. Re:Longer Life Cycle by tgd · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The PC is here to stay. What we are seeing is a longer life cycle. There is no need to update the hardware these days,

      Hold on there why does anyone say this....I want more powerful hardware and can use it. Where is my 4X 1080P 24" touchscreen monitor, with keyboard with LED keys with these futuristic storage sizes with android compatibility...at a price I can afford.

      Those are new monitors, not new PCs. You proved the GP's point. You talk about more powerful hardware, and listed nothing that actually involves replacing the PC. You just need to replace the peripherals.

    3. Re:Longer Life Cycle by UnknowingFool · · Score: 1

      Because you != everyone. I hardly think my elderly parents want to work with 2 24" monitors much less 4 to surf the web. Teenagers and children aren't going to lug 4 monitors into bed while playing games or listening to their music. Before consumers had to buy PCs to get any functionality. There will always be a need for PCs but more and more it is being relegated to power users. Face it, a core 2 duo is still more than sufficient if all you do is catch up on Facebook.

      --
      Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
    4. Re:Longer Life Cycle by jedidiah · · Score: 2

      Kids can most certainly appreciate a powerful machine if you bother to give one to them. They will happily lug it around too.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    5. Re:Longer Life Cycle by UnknowingFool · · Score: 2

      Are you insane? A 4 and 6 year old is not lugging around my 30 lb desktop and 4 monitors. If we are talking about laptops, I'm certainly not letting them handle my laptop either. As for power, what they hell do they need a quad-core i5 that they can't do with an ARM processor? Do they math and spelling games work suddenly better? Now if they need to do a research report in a few years, they can use the desktop but by then who knows what they will use then.

      --
      Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
    6. Re:Longer Life Cycle by hairyfeet · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You don't have that for the same reason screens have settled on 720p and 1080p, the masses frankly see no need in going any higher and aren't gonna pay the early adopter penalty to get the economies of scale to get bigger and badder as the new standard. Hell my netbook is 1366x768 and I can see why, when I'm mobile its just fine,I'm not gonna go spend crazy money just to get a higher rez when all i want is to do the service call and go back to the shop.

      But one correction, MSFT didn't "turn" the PC into anything, despite MSFT trying to shove their shit in our face like the "Deep Wang" bit in Transformers 3 Windows 8 is doing worse than Vista did and Win 8.1 looks to be the first double flop in history. Oh they WISH they had done that, so they could jack prices to Apple levels, but in reality every retailer and e-Tailer is saying "We have Win 7 here!" so all MSFT has done is killed a LOT of sales and honestly gave the pirates a hell of a boost, pirate win 7 slapped on win 8 systems is starting to become the norm, at least in my area.

      And I don't see anybody "running to Android", what I see is people refusing to pay MSFT for an ad-laden cellphone OS so they are just sticking with what they have. Most every person i have met doesn't "like" their Android or iToy, they tolerate it. This is why plenty of laptops still selling, anything more than a quick Google on those phones and it quickly gets irritating for most folks but with even the low end laptops have dual cores there just isn't a reason to upgrade as often.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    7. Re:Longer Life Cycle by Tr3vin · · Score: 1

      As for power, what they hell do they need a quad-core i5 that they can't do with an ARM processor?

      Minecraft.

    8. Re:Longer Life Cycle by jellomizer · · Score: 1

      Distance between you and the display is usually around 50cm at that distance people tend not to see these pixels as blocky combined with Anti-Aliasing so it isn't that big of a deal. The problem is most Desktop OS's don't offer good zoom in and out controls.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    9. Re:Longer Life Cycle by houghi · · Score: 1

      Where is my 4X 1080P 24" touchscreen monitor, with keyboard with LED keys with these futuristic storage sizes with android compatibility...at a price I can afford.

      Right under my desk.
      I have 2 1920x1200 monitors and 2x1920x1080. 3x24" and 1x46"
      I have 8TB storage (plus some more working SSD)
      Not sure what you mean by "android compatibility" but it runs Linux and I connect my Android phone to it to control it if I so desire.

      Except for the 46" screen which I bought 4 weeks ago, I have this since 5 or 6 years already. So the reason you do not have it is not because it does not exist. It does.

      OK, I do not have a 46" touchscreen, because I do not want to walk to the screen when I am 'sitting' on my couch. However that hardware also is available if you want it. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ADWEeVOjnRk

      --
      Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
    10. Re:Longer Life Cycle by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 1

      This may be a chicken or the egg problem, but realistic physics might actually be a draw for kids. Imagine a game which lets you build a city, and then smash it to pieces... Or a game which just happens to simulate fur, cloth and hair in a realistic manner.

    11. Re: Longer Life Cycle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Minecraft just came out as an Xbox 360 disc that you can just plug into an Xbox and run Minecraft without even needing to go online. Takes away a lot of the modding/hacking possibilities but does away with the need for the desktop power. Non PC Minecraft versions are coded by different teams and probably tighter code than the java monster we're all used to.

    12. Re:Longer Life Cycle by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      Sure I get it. You think that your children deserve scraps.

      Not everyone thinks like that.

      Some kids are appreciative of decent kit and responsible enough to take care of it. If yours aren't, perhaps you should consider that a result of poor parenting.

      Intentionally buying crap you know to be inferior ultimately just subverts capitalism.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    13. Re:Longer Life Cycle by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      It's far too easy to end up with a craptacular experience when you start trying to cut corners with computing devices. It's not necessarily so much about being terribly powerful but avoiding total suckage.

      Penny wise and pound foolish.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    14. Re:Longer Life Cycle by kimvette · · Score: 1

      > As for power, what they hell do they need a quad-core i5 that they can't do with an ARM processor?

      minecraft, wow, starcraft, final fantasy, elder scrolls (soon), etc.
      nonlinear video editing (you'd be surprised how many kids are amateur videographers)
      3D modeling (again, you'd be surprised how many kids. . . )

      Not all kids are dumb kids who can barely figure out how to open Reader Rabbit apps.

      --
      The Christian Right is Neither (Christian nor right). See: Matthew 23, Matthew 25, Ezekiel 16:48-50
    15. Re:Longer Life Cycle by UnknowingFool · · Score: 1

      Sure I get it. You think that your children deserve scraps.

      My tablet costs more than my laptop or desktop, you insensitive clod.

      Not everyone thinks like that.

      Do you have small children? Because anything with a touch interface is much easier for them to use than keyboard and mouse.

      Some kids are appreciative of decent kit and responsible enough to take care of it. If yours aren't, perhaps you should consider that a result of poor parenting.

      Are you an idiot? Small children will not be lifting 30 lbs of desktop and 4 monitors. They are small children. I don't know about you but most parents I know don't make their children lift heavy things for no reason. Most parents also control how much TV and computer usage. They are 4 and 6 years old.

      Intentionally buying crap you know to be inferior ultimately just subverts capitalism.

      Again, my tablet costs more than my laptop and desktop, you insensitive clod.

      --
      Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
    16. Re: Longer Life Cycle by tepples · · Score: 1

      Minecraft just came out as an Xbox 360 disc

      Which doesn't help if the console they happen to own is a Wii U or a PlayStation 3.

    17. Re:Longer Life Cycle by tepples · · Score: 1

      Now if they need to do a research report in a few years, they can use the desktop

      I was programming in BASIC at 9 and in 6502 assembly language at 13. In a few years, introduction to programming is likely to be a required subject in high schools. Once your 6-year-old gets an itch to program in a couple years, what are you going to let him or her use?

    18. Re:Longer Life Cycle by UnknowingFool · · Score: 1

      Once your 6-year-old gets an itch to program in a couple years, what are you going to let him or her use?

      When/if they have a desire to touch a computer, we'll see. If/when they have a desire to play sports, we'll also see. I'm not pushing children into activities that they don't want to do.

      --
      Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
  23. Microsoft kills the PC by 0123456 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I suspect this is primarily because people who think of buying a new PC go to the store and see Windows 8 and think 'WTF? Why do I want a tablet interface on my 24" monitor?'

    In a vain attempt to gain a few percent market share on tablets, Microsoft are killing their PC cash cow.

    1. Re:Microsoft kills the PC by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While I agree Win8 is a problem in terms of it's desktop UI, I do believe there's a case for a 24" touch-screen.

      Having used a Asus transformer I was amazed that within a few weeks I was reaching for the screen on my regular laptop and home/work desktops.

      Even though the mouse was still my go to 90% of the time, when you're hands are on the keyboard and you just want to click one thing:

      Touchsreen: 1) move hand to screen and touch (you could argue this is two actions I guess, but they're one fluid motion) 2) return hand to keyboard

      Mouse: 1) move hand to mouse 2) locate cursor on screen 3) move cursor to desired point and click 4) return hand to keyboard

      I think a lot of people who've not tried it think touchscreen is meant to replace the mouse, it's not. It's meant to be another input on top of the current staples.

      I, for one, approve of our new touchable overlords.

    2. Re:Microsoft kills the PC by 0123456 · · Score: 1

      Touchsreen: 1) move hand to screen and touch (you could argue this is two actions I guess, but they're one fluid motion) 2) return hand to keyboard

      Realise you selected the wrong link because your finger is much larger than the text. Touch back to go back to the previous web page. Touch the scrollbar to scroll back to where the link was. Zoom in on the link so you can actually select it reliably. Finally touch the link and get to where you wanted to go.

    3. Re:Microsoft kills the PC by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Working at a computer repair shop, we're getting tons of computers running XP. Our customers held on to their old computers for as long as possible - then Windows 8 came out, and they realized they couldn't get a replacement because 8 is f****d up. So now they're trying to get the old machines fixed.

  24. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by h4rr4r · · Score: 0

    Fun fact, you can use a keyboard with a tablet that has a touch screen. You really should look into the wonders of bluetooth.

  25. PC is the new Mainframe by jellomizer · · Score: 2

    The Mainframe isn't dead, however it isn't as widely used as it once was. They are still new Mainframes being made, and any true Computer Scientist would drool to get their hands on one.
    But that being said, they are not selling as many as they use to, most companies are going to PC based servers, because they are cheaper, and more software flexibility, and you are not as stuck with one company for support, and a large group of developers who can handle the platform.

    Now the PC, are tablets going replace them? No, but they will bring the PC down to a few manufacturers. I expect Lenovo, Dell, Apple to survive in the desktop area, as they (Apple to the lesser extent) have a good hold in the business markets. However PC's would probably be more like Workstations reserved for more computer intensive work such as Software Development, CAD, Finance... But for other people tablets, with say keyboards could replace the rest of the people.

    --
    If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    1. Re:PC is the new Mainframe by toastar · · Score: 0

      The mainframe today is just a bunch of PC Servers that happen to have infiniband.

    2. Re:PC is the new Mainframe by bored · · Score: 1

      I'm a pretty strong lover of geek toys myself. And I was "lucky" enough to have a brand spanking new mainframe (z114) provided to me at work, to complete some things I was working on.

      Let me tell you right now, this thing cost a fortune and is a _HUGE_ piece of proprietary junk. Sure it can run zOS, but Hercules running on my desktop is actually faster because IBM likes to license the CPU performance, and the machine starts at 26 "MIPS". Let me try to explain how fast a 26 MIP mainframe is.... Its has roughly the same performance as a Pentium 90 from the early '90's.

      I also have a IFL, to run zvm and linux, let me describe how fast an unlocked z114 running linux is... Its about as fast as the 5 year old servers we are decommissioning. Plus, zvm makes building xen from source and hacking config files by hand look like a walk in the park.

      Then there is IO capability, which pretty much sucks as everything runs though this huge bottleneck called "ficon" before being converted to SCSI/FC at the attached control unit.

      About the only thing going for the IBM mainframe seems to be the fact that IBM has this insane level of compatibility with machines they produced 40 years ago. This allows applications written 40 years ago to run on "modern" hardware. Of course that modern hardware is jumping through emulation hoops (can you say MOD9 DASD!) to provide an environment that feels like a time machine has been employed.

      I might be more understanding, if it weren't for the fact that IBM charges hundreds of thousands for a machine that has less capability to run zOS than your average smart phone. To get any real compute power its an 8 figure number.

    3. Re:PC is the new Mainframe by RabidReindeer · · Score: 1

      The Mainframe isn't dead, however it isn't as widely used as it once was. They are still new Mainframes being made, and any true Computer Scientist would drool to get their hands on one.

      Probably not, actually. A mainframe is a business machine. What most Computer Scientists would probably salivate over is a supercomputer. And these days, supercomputers are generally assembled from PC components.

      Not that mainframes don't still have utility. But their primary audience is companies large enough (and old enough) to have significantly bought into IBM's technological stack.

    4. Re:PC is the new Mainframe by lgw · · Score: 2

      Mainframes have never been about CPU performance. It's entirely the wrong tool for the job if you want to crunch numbers. Mainframes are about uptimes and I/O parallelization, and until recently, they were the only way to get VMs.

      When I worked with mainframes in the mid 90s, are main business box had all the CPU of a Pentium 3 desktop, but we supported 6000 terminals with about 2000 active users doing database-intensive tasks. And even then we were making heavy use of compressed caches to use idle CPU to improve I/O performance just a bit more.

      There are mainframes out there with multi-decade uptimes, because you can replace every part without shutting one down, so you can swap parts as they become obsolete.

      There are 2 technologies that will finally spell the death of the mainframe IMO. Ubiquitous VMs have already happened (a few years back, even), so IBM has lost it's multi-decade monopoly on the concept. The other big change is "cloud-style" computing. New apps written specifically to scale out change everything: you just don't care if a server fails, and you can add useful I/O bandwidth just by adding more servers.

      A mainframe has always been a "cloud in a box", and there's enough truth to the idea that "cloud is the new mainframe" to spell the death of mainframes, IMO.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    5. Re:PC is the new Mainframe by ArsonSmith · · Score: 1

      semi-funny store, when IBM came out to deploy our New Mainframe the engineers had to go back to the documentation because he hadn't set up a new once since he was in training many many years ago. He said that nobody installs new ones it's just maintenance and upgrade of existing ones.

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
    6. Re:PC is the new Mainframe by mjwx · · Score: 1

      The Mainframe isn't dead, however it isn't as widely used as it once was. They are still new Mainframes being made, and any true Computer Scientist would drool to get their hands on one.
      But that being said, they are not selling as many as they use to, most companies are going to PC based servers, because they are cheaper, and more software flexibility, and you are not as stuck with one company for support, and a large group of developers who can handle the platform.

      Most mainframes have shrunk into two forms. Very high powered servers like IBM System P or clusters. Bare metal hypervisors are dragging most high performance applications to clusters. If you need 40 physical processors and 1 TB of RAM, well I can get that in 1 blade chassis.

      The new mainframes being made are for very, very specialised applications, otherwise we've replaced them with racks of interconnected servers.

      Now the PC, are tablets going replace them? No, but they will bring the PC down to a few manufacturers.

      I doubt this. Tablets are in a bubble, the deficiencies of tablets are forcing people to buy peripherals like keyboards for them. Well a tablet with a keyboard... Wait that's a laptop.

      You may also have noticed that most computer manufacturers are now also making tablets. Acer, Asus, Toshiba, Lenovo, hell even Dell have had a crack at it. So hardware vendors aren't the losers here. The only one who stands to suffer is Microsoft as people get used to OS's that aren't Windows.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
  26. What were they expecting? by Pollux · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Perpetual exponential growth? Good luck with that.

    I would expect this to be obvious to the casual observer, but I guess not. So, let me enumerate:
    Primary reasons for the decline:

    1) The PC has been around now for over 20 years. It no longer possesses excitement and consumer appeal.
    2) SMARTPhones and tablets are better meeting the needs and desires of the consumer; their increasing sales are supplanting PC sales.
    3) The PC market is saturated, either due to consumer need or financial constraint. (Plenty of foreign markets have consumers but lack capital to meet the saturation levels of Western countries.)
    4) Digital product producers, online retailers, and brick & mortar stores have all been significantly marketing tablet and SMARTPhone devices to consumers while ignoring their traditional PC products.
    5) Tablets and SMARTPhones have much shorter average lifespans than traditional PCs, creating more consistant and continual demand for their replacement.

    Ergo, you have a very simple recipe for the decline of PC sales.

    1. Re:What were they expecting? by UnknowingFool · · Score: 2

      I would add to that Win 8 didn't help matters. At best Win 8 offers nothing exciting to a consumer. At worst, it has driven them away.

      --
      Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
    2. Re:What were they expecting? by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      1) The PC has been around now for over 20 years. It no longer possesses excitement and consumer appeal.

      Did it ever? Were people really ever excited about another beige or black box? From time to time people had to buy them because their old one wasn't quick enough for the latest software. But excited? Not so much. Geeks were, but not ordinary consumers, not so much.

      OK, I'm overstating it. When PC were new, back in the early 80s, a beige box could be very exciting. But the last couple of decades? Not so much.

  27. not correct by slashmydots · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "PC sales have been hurt in recent years by the growing popularity of tablets."
    That's BS, it's Windows 8's fault entirely. This study doesn't count used PC resale or a drop in computer (scrap) recycling levels. Tablets replace laptops, not PCs. There is no drop because of tablets. It is completely Windows 8's fault.

    1. Re:not correct by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How weird that you'd call BS on someone else's claim, then make a completely, obviously BS claim yourself in the same post. It's deeply stupid to claim that it's all Win 8's fault.

    2. Re:not correct by dugancent · · Score: 1

      No it's not. People DON'T NEED A new computer. That 5 year old C2D I have? Works just fine and would for 90% of the population. Programmers and gamers are a niche.

      --
      SJWs are the new boogeyman. -Me
    3. Re:not correct by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Got some facts for this mate? Or is this straight from the "Out of My Arse" think tank?

  28. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by Known+Nutter · · Score: 1

    You conveniently ignored the rest of the GP's comment. A BT keyboard and typing a letter... great, but what about the rest of it?

    --
    Beware of the Leopard.
  29. Re:No software exists to justify buying new hardwa by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

    You forgot consoles. They are so woefully underpowered right now compared to desktop computers that it limits games since no big budget games will go PC only. The PS4 and and Xbone are not exactly sporting impressive specs either. I was pretty let down when their specs came out. You can be sure they will be around at least as long as the current generation, so that will stagnate gaming pretty seriously on the performance side of things.

  30. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by MetalliQaZ · · Score: 1

    True, but I would argue that using a keyboard on a tablet is somewhat like using a touchscreen on Windows 7. It will work, but it wasn't designed to be used that way and it doesn't work all that great.

    --
    "Here Lies Philip J. Fry, named for his uncle, to carry on his spirit"
  31. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The PC age is not over, the PC market is saturated with good enough hardware for the masses. This means users don't need to regularly replace their computers when they maintain what they have. The people these days who upgrade regularly are specialists who are constantly working with bigger datasets, gamers who want to max out the detail settings for the latest 3D games, or people with disposable cash and are too ignorant about PC maintenance who adorn their system with the prettiest malware filled screensavers.

    The PC will always be needed for a huge range of tasks in the workforce. It's true that there are plenty of computing applications that only require minimal user input while the heavy lifting is done on some pro server machine in some hidden room, such users would likely be satisfied with a touchscreen tablet. For everybody else who uses a computer to input truckloads of data or does finely controlled creative work all day long, these people would likely prefer a keyboard, mouse, >10" display and a decent amount of power for processing that a traditional PC offers.

  32. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

    What else did I miss?
    You can use a mouse and keyboard over bluetooth, how is this much different than any other PC?

    Android is now reinventing Desktop environments, they are all the way up to Tiling window managers!
    Next comes overlapping windows and then full compositing.

  33. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

    Works fine for me.
    Heck, it saves a lot of screen real-estate if you turn off the onscreen one.

    Android is reinventing window management, they are up to tiling and this rate we may have full compositing in a couple years.

  34. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by HaZardman27 · · Score: 1

    I still use only 4GB of RAM in both my work and home desktops. I do "normal" PC things like browse the web, listen to music, check email, and create documents. I also write software. Sometimes I do all of these things at the same time. Granted I'm typically using Linux, but I still never use any paged memory. When I want to play a game, I boot up Windows, and typically the game will be the only major piece of software running, so 4GB has still been enough for me. I had friends who were putting 12 to 16GB of RAM in a desktop three or four years ago. These guys don't even do any video editing or rendering, or anything that could seriously take advantage of that much memory.

    In a year or two, I will probably upgrade. I imagine the introduction of new gaming consoles will start pushing game developers to start advancing again, and games will actually take advantage of better hardware.

    --
    Apparently wizard is not a legitimate career path, so I chose programmer instead.
  35. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by whizbang77045 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Part of the longer life cycle is the lack of anything new with widespread appeal. Since Windows XP, the new versions have been lackluster. Sure, they draw a lot of really colorful pictures on the desktop. But they don't do much that couldn't already be done.

    The existing PCs are powerful enough for most users, and have been for years. Most users are running Word, EXCEL, or their open source equivalents. They've had enough speed and memory for years. New hardware buys them little more than a keyboard without fingerprints. New software actually slows the machine down due to all the glitz.

    Sure, there are a few people like me who want more speed for video processing, or other computational tasks,, but we're the exception, not the rule.

  36. More people KNOW how to build a computer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    More people know how to build a computer at the fraction of the cost. Consider the fact that a considerable amount of kids back when windows 95 was released are full grown adults, probably married as well. The generation before it knew almost nothing about computers. Now, Dell, Gateway, HP etc... They all make solid PC bundles from time to time but it can easily be done at home at the fraction of the cost and they are usually built with the customer's needs in mind, versus on what the corporation wants the customer to do. For example, if I want a computer that will last 3-years, I will build one that lasts for 3-years and still be slick. Additionally, computers are "Fast enough" as it is. My computer was originally built in 2007. The only three things that are still original on it are the motherboard, processor, and dvd burner. I did upgrades incrementally and I can play BF3 at full settings. Incremental upgrades is the keything here and I can't be anymore redundant because these polls are always the same deal. Focus strictly on bundle sales and you're going to pretend that the market is dying. If anything, the PC is just as important if not more important than before. Steam is an amazing thing.

  37. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by RaceProUK · · Score: 1

    The era of the home PC is over.

    FTFY.

    The market won't disappear of course, because of hobbyist developers, gamers, etc.

    --
    No colour or religion ever stopped the bullet from a gun
  38. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1

    The real issue here is that software is not being developed to exploit the new found power of modern PCs. An entire generation of programmers is wasting their time writing sophmoric beta "apps" for restricted tablet devices. People are buying these yes, but collectively our software and productivity levels are not advancing.

    People used to upgrade their PCs to get a new OS with useful new applications. No such OS is being made anymore. Most of them, Windows, Mac and many Linux distros, are instead sliding ever backwards.

    --
    May the Maths Be with you!
  39. Sure Microsoft has now nothing to do with it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Maybe this was emphasized too much ... maybe

    Microsoft, with Windows 8 said that the PC is dead and only the tablet has a future.
    They stopped completely to support developers on desktop development because the desktop is dead, they said.
    At the recent build the message was clear, all the technology to make desktop application are deprecated and probably Windows 9 will have just the don't call it Metro interface.
    This is so idiotic that no one would believe they will make it.

    They did it.

    I know, this argument was emphasized too much in the past days and even without these decision by Microsoft, the PC sales would have dropped because all the people out there are just buying a tablet and for that, now all say Microsoft has nothing to do with it, come on ... it's not Microsoft fault.

    But I invite you to consider the opposite scenario ... if we had a Windows 8 totally dedicated to the desktop and with great features, or better without the schizophrenic interface it has now, used maybe on a separate Microsoft OS just for tablet, do you really think that had not helped to draw a different scenario?

    There are few reasons to buy a PC at the moment just to run Windows 8 in any .x releases they will make. This is the truth.
    Thinking that customers are just a bunch of idiots buying anything you push to them doesn't pay in the long run

  40. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by RaceProUK · · Score: 1

    Should have also said that I believe we're now in the era of multi-device, as more people have a tablet and a smartphone, either instead of or alongside the more traditional PC and/or laptop.

    --
    No colour or religion ever stopped the bullet from a gun
  41. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That is a truly misguided statement. Here's a better one:

    "Consumers use touch screens. Producers use keyboards."

    Good luck using a tablet for tasks such as Photoshop or Blender.

    Most people are neither pure producers or pure consumers.

    How about this: "People use PCs when they're on the job. When they get home, they use tablets."

    Heck, even using a tablet to type out a proper letter could be classified as cruel and inhumane.

    Who types out proper letters anymore? (Answer: people applying for or resigning from jobs. Also octegenarians)

    The era of the PC is not over... only the era of the PC as an entertainment device.

    This. Except for hard-core PC gamers, a tablet is the go-to device for goofing off on the Interwebs.

  42. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Nope, it's still a play device. Arm sucks, why the fuck would i want a tablet with the abilities of a 386? That's right the ARM world is being to break the power of a 386/486. WOW! Bluetooth with a 386! What fucking alternate universe do you live in? Tablets suck. Keep hitting the button for you dopamine fix fucktard. Pavlov's dog en masse!

  43. I'm so bored of the BS about the DEATH of PC's by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "PC sales have been hurt in recent years by the growing popularity of tablets" NO NO NO BS!!! Tablets compliment PC's, no SANE person would completely replace their PC with a tablet (at least not one that actually uses their PC for work)
    The PC sales decline is due to one thing only, NO requirement for new PC, it's that simple, new PC's these days don't offer any better performance or experience than the PC of 3-4years ago. Why buy a new PC when the one you have works great!?
    Tablet sales are doing great because they compliment PC's, best option for when you're out and about on the move & not everyone has one, YET!
    That's the main reason PC sales are down, I would almost bet that more PC's are in USE & more people use PC's now than have ever been used in the past.

  44. No mention of Windows 8 by intermodal · · Score: 1

    I love how this article fails to mention Windows 8 and focuses entirely on tablets. I haven't even owned a desktop since about 2006, instead using a laptop, but even at the office, anything with multiple cores has been fine so far as long as we have plenty of RAM.

    I've been replacing a few Pentium 4 (pre-HT with 512MB-1GB RAM) systems here and there, but that's about it.

    --
    In SOVIET RUSSIA... erm...NSA AMERICA, the Internet logs onto YOU!
  45. The PC no longer possesses consumer appeal by tuppe666 · · Score: 1

    I've ignored your drivel about a smartphone replacing the Desktop Computer...even though I agree the smartphone is a personal computer, I find them complementary devices.

    Looking at your statement "PC has been around now for over 20 years. It no longer possesses excitement and consumer appeal." It needs to generate it. It needs to lower prices...produce compelling exciting machines, Where is the sambuntu +android compatible 8 core ARM laptop with 4X displays for under $200. The only think old is Microsoft + Intel (and Apple)...and Ironically copying Apples losing (vastly profitable) strategy. Looks like Android Desktop computers for us whatever you think of that.

  46. My 2007 laptop still serves me well by Junior+J.+Junior+III · · Score: 1

    I bought a T61p Thinkpad in 2007, and it's still my everyday machine. I've upgraded the memory to 8GB, hard disk, replaced a keyboard, and the battery, all very economically when the prices of those components came down. I love this machine, especially its keyboard, and am loathe to give it up unless I can find another with the same layout. In particular the pgup/pgdn/home/end keys are layed out in a manner which makes them very useful and natural for navigating within a window. I wish laptop chassis were standardized enough that you could customize these sorts of components easily so you can get just exactly what you want. I'm thinking about finally upgrading sometime in the next year, but am in no hurry. I'm considering a Thinkpad T530 or a 15" MacBook Pro with Retina display. I looked at the Razer Blade Pro, but I didn't think I'd like the keyboard, and had concerns about durability (due to lack of data on that aspect and not having seen one in person to gauge how sturdy they are).

    --
    You see? You see? Your stupid minds! Stupid! Stupid!
  47. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

    Some of use even have smartphone, multiple tablets, laptops and more than 1 PC. As it turns out the total cost for all this stuff is pretty amazingly low and it fits in pretty small part of the average human dwelling.

  48. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by tgd · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The era of the PC is over. I'm not sure why anyone would be surprised at this.

    That's drawing a conclusion on shaky evidence.

    Drops in PC sales does't indicate that PC usage has dropped.

    The real issue is two things:
    - There's little in the way of new markets for generic computing devices. After 30 years, most of the population likely to ever have one have been served effectively by the companies selling them
    - In existing, saturated markets, there's declining reason to replace existing systems. The sweet spot of memory, storage, and CPU power has been met for the majority of the uses that people have them for. Gaming is really the only area pushing a need for new computers, and even that is arguable in most cases. (Peripheral sales like new video cards is doing just fine, as an example). Even things like editing HD video of the kids is done more than effectively with five year old hardware.

    That is the real problem. There's no need to upgrade a 3-4 year old system, short of hardware failures. The fact that even a small part of the market (and is IS very small) can do everything they need on a tablet, without a primary computer is more evidence that there's just no "new" uses that drive a need for new hardware, and a smaller "ultrabook" form factor isn't a compelling enough reason to get people to cough up $1k.

    Fact is, other then web surfing, most of the things people have always used PCs for they still need to use PCs for. You can't store a terabyte of family video and photos on a tablet. If you have a Windows tablet, I suppose you could use an external drive. Wireless NAS is just too slow. You're not, generally, going to tap your way through your taxes on a little tablet.

    PC era isn't over, but the era of 18-24 month lifespan for PCs is. If that doubles, then sales have to drop in half.

  49. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by mlts · · Score: 1

    Nail, head, hit. The PC has moved from the primary computer to more of a background workhorse. Eventually, it will merge with the server [1].

    What has changed is that there are other ways to use machines other than keyboards/monitors, in the way of media consumption. Devices needed for media production are just less in demand. Where someone would view a YouTube vid on their desktop in the past, they might watch it on their laptop or phone today.

    [1]: Something I find ironic since I do see a market for home servers that can do DNS caching, backups which rsync to an encrypted remote drive, OnLive-like streaming of video, SAN functionality with 10GB iSCSI, even a PCIe antenna to switch to LTE if the main upstream goes down. Ultimately, I can see the desktop becoming more of a background server (perhaps along the lines of Intel's personal servers), and would have multiple ways to access the data on it.

  50. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by Mike+Frett · · Score: 1

    So what are you going to do, large scale video and audio editing on a Tablet or your Phone?. Oh that's right, you're going to make an AAA Game or some Movie CGI for a flick next year on that Phone and Tablet!.

    Please...just because you don't have any work to do, doesn't mean the rest of us don't.

  51. Heh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I put a more powerful PC together for less than half of what comparable laptops sell for. Even desktops. They don't mention that though. Only the failures are mentioned. Yay PC! It's your NAS, media center, personal workspace and porn machine all in one!

  52. Re:No software exists to justify buying new hardwa by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Correct. I did not forget them but I see the console interaction as part of the consolidation/anti-piracy-control problem/profit over quality issue with the electronic game industry in general.

  53. PCs are not dying. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Until you can give me a tablet that can reasonably multitask, is NOT Windows 8 EVER, has decent keyboard, mouse, peripheral support, support for external monitors, possibly even support for external graphics card bays that are slowly growing in numbers to make laptop users not feel as gimped, PCs will never die.

    Seriously, think of it this way:
    Remember that Big.LITTLE thing mentioned earlier from ARM? Now, imagine instead of that being inside the tablet, imagine extending that to external hardware instead.
    The beefy stuff is in a box dedicated to high CPU and GPU load. Literally an embedded CPU/GPU solution in a box with extra working memory, sorta like those current external GPU bays you can buy now, mainly used for laptop solutions since they can't upgrade. You just plug tablet in to this box, box to screen (even wirelessHDMI)
    Add better support for external hardware through USB hub. (that powers it too)
    There could probably even be a hub designed for this in particular. It has a CPU/GPU connection, say, 4 USB, ethernet, audio connections, and all of this goes in a high-bandwidth single wire in to the what is now the USB and powering method for most tablets just now. You could probably even separate the CPU/GPU, USB/AUDIO, ethernet lines but just have them inside the same cabling. No faffing around with so many different cables, plug one thing in, sit tablet down, done.

    So, now I can have my mobile tablet, take it around outside with me, do whatever crap.
    Come home, plug in to hub, sit it on stand, optionally turn monitor on, have keyboard and mouse control, can play Crysis on my god damn tablet and monitor at the same time with no problems.
    I would get rid of my desktop in a heart beat for this simplicity in PC design. PCs are terrible, disgusting messes of hardware from an industry scared to change.
    Where the hell are 3D motherboards already? Motherboards don't get THAT hot, it is the components on them that do. And even some of those aren't that hot.
    Why the hell is half my motherboard not wrapped up in to a tiny little box yet?
    Why are RAM chips still huge instead of laptop form-factor? Expensive? Because you won't bloody adapt and still make stupid huge chips! Take the pill already!

    The desktop industry will have to adapt at some point, and the above is honestly the best idea for everyone.
    It packs the simplicity and complexity of hardware in to a very neat solution, the portability of mobile solutions to fixed hardware, the weak underpowered applications to bleeding eyeball inducing games.
    And this is from someone that screws around with hardware and the like.
    Common interfaces are the best thing, everything else around it can be whatever crappy terrible hardware it wants to be, just use common, simple methods to link everything together and everyone is happy, from the casuals to the enthusiasts. (people that like pain and suffering need not apply)

  54. Have you ever actually seen a mainframe? by sirwired · · Score: 5, Informative

    Have you ever actually laid eyes on a mainframe? You seem to be confusing them with low-budget HPC clusters. IBM is the largest mainframe vendor and I can assure you that they are not "a bunch of PC servers with Infiniband."

    They use processors unique to mainframes; they don't even use IBM's POWER CPUs. They certainly don't use "PC" processors.
    The internal I/O architecture is also unique to the box. (This is why they were, for many, many, years, the king of transaction processing; they had some unique advantages over the PC/UNIX way of doing I/O.)
    Externally, they can talk several different protocols; communication to the "outside world" is mostly TCP/IP, and communication to peripherals is done via FICON (mainframe I/O over Fibre Channel), although Linux partitions can use FCP. (SCSI over Fibre Channel.)

    I don't think the boxes can talk infiniband at all. Why would they? That's mainly an HPC protocol, and you'd be a complete blithering idiot to be running HPC applications on a really-expensive business-oriented transaction-processing monster.

    1. Re:Have you ever actually seen a mainframe? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ummm IBM iDataplex, and yea it's a PC with infiniband...
      And look at the top500 and you'll see them all over the place.

    2. Re:Have you ever actually seen a mainframe? by evilviper · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Ummm IBM iDataplex, and yea it's a PC with infiniband...

      That's because it's just a server, definitely NOT a mainframe. Just because IBM sells it doesn't make it a mainframe. IBM's mainframes are under the "z" Series.

      And look at the top500 and you'll see them all over the place.

      The Top500 is a list of the highest-performing systems. In other word HPC. It's NOT a list of mainframes. The Top 500 doesn't CARE about mainframes at all, as evidenced by their benchmark being purely number-crunching, with NO attempt to record I/O performance, which is the specialty of mainframes.

      Slashdot... Lots of fools who know just enough to be dangerous.

      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    3. Re:Have you ever actually seen a mainframe? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The term is pretty muddy. Everything you listed isn't actually a requirement of a mainframe.

      From wikipedia:

      Mainframe computers (colloquially referred to as "big iron"[1]) are computers used primarily by corporate and governmental organizations for critical applications, bulk data processing such as census, industry and consumer statistics, enterprise resource planning, and transaction processing. The term originally referred to the large cabinets that housed the central processing unit and main memory of early computers.[2][3] Later, the term was used to distinguish high-end commercial machines from less powerful units.[4] Most large-scale computer system architectures were established in the 1960s, but continue to evolve.

      Modern mainframe design is generally less defined by single-task computational speed (typically defined as MIPS rate or FLOPS in the case of floating point calculations), and more by:

                      Redundant internal engineering and resulting high reliability and security
                      Extensive input-output facilities
                      Strict backward compatibility with older software
                      High hardware and computational utilization rates to support massive throughput

      Their high stability and reliability enables these machines to run uninterrupted for long periods of time.

      I would say true mainframes don't really exist anymore because there is no drive to design a computer that way anymore. The modern mainframe is really just a high performance server and exists from an infatuation with the term mainframe.

    4. Re:Have you ever actually seen a mainframe? by MondoGordo · · Score: 1

      "This is why they were, for many, many, years, the king of transaction processing;:" Still are ...

    5. Re:Have you ever actually seen a mainframe? by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 1

      I don't think the boxes can talk infiniband at all.

      Implementing and Managing InfiniBand Coupling Links on System z

    6. Re:Have you ever actually seen a mainframe? by RabidReindeer · · Score: 1

      Have you ever actually laid eyes on a mainframe? You seem to be confusing them with low-budget HPC clusters. IBM is the largest mainframe vendor and I can assure you that they are not "a bunch of PC servers with Infiniband."

      They use processors unique to mainframes; they don't even use IBM's POWER CPUs. They certainly don't use "PC" processors.
      The internal I/O architecture is also unique to the box. (This is why they were, for many, many, years, the king of transaction processing; they had some unique advantages over the PC/UNIX way of doing I/O.)
      Externally, they can talk several different protocols; communication to the "outside world" is mostly TCP/IP, and communication to peripherals is done via FICON (mainframe I/O over Fibre Channel), although Linux partitions can use FCP. (SCSI over Fibre Channel.)

      I don't think the boxes can talk infiniband at all. Why would they? That's mainly an HPC protocol, and you'd be a complete blithering idiot to be running HPC applications on a really-expensive business-oriented transaction-processing monster.

      Back around Y2K, our primary mainframe ran 4 600MHz processors. The PC norm at that time was about 1 GHz, although it's not an apples-to-apples speed comparison. I don't know what chips they were using by that time, although IBM has been known to customise both POWER and Motorola MC68K CPU dies. Since IBM preferred microcode-based systems, the actual physical CPU circuitry wasn't a direct reflection on the higher level instruction set. Back in the 1980s they had a "desktop" mainframe that was based on one stock MC68000 and one MC68000 with a custom S/370 mask. The Motorola MC68K had a lot of architectural similarities to the S/370 instruction set. Sadly, the machine never caught on.

      The single biggest asset that the S/360 and its descendants had were their channel controllers. They were essentially independent RISC CPUs that had DMA capabilities. On some machines, they were simply microcode routines, but on the more advanced ones, they were independent co-processors. These days we are used to intelligent peripheral interfaces and high-performance DMA, but back then, it was pretty radical. Additionally, the heavy lifting on peripherals was done by the peripheral control units, which not only disburdened the primary CPU from low-level I/O tasks, it also made the OS I/O code more portable and the drivers much simpler.

      In short, you could make a mainframe entirely from off-the shelf hardware. Especially now that a lot of the peripheral devices are using interfaces that are PC-interchangeable. Moreso when you consider than an actual zSeries emulator is available as open-source software (Project Hercules).

      The primary distinction, however, is cultural. IBM never told its mainframe clients to "try powering it off and back on again" as a routine means of resolving problems. Mainframes and mainframe OS's are expected to be robust. And re-booted (IPL'ed) no more often than once a week for maintenance, if that often.

    7. Re:Have you ever actually seen a mainframe? by RabidReindeer · · Score: 2

      I would say true mainframes don't really exist anymore because there is no drive to design a computer that way anymore. The modern mainframe is really just a high performance server and exists from an infatuation with the term mainframe.

      I would say rather that high-performance servers are functional equivalent to mainframes. But these days I use the term "mainframe" to refer to IBM iSeries and zSeries machines. All of the other old-line "mainframe" vendors are now either in the PC/server business or extinct, as far as I know.

      The main thing that keeps these products distinct is that they carry forward the architecture and software from the days when mainframes really were systems whose capabilities were in a class by themselves.

    8. Re:Have you ever actually seen a mainframe? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey, I actually owned two mainframes. They were old and obsolete. It took an extra bedroom just to store the documentation for them.

    9. Re:Have you ever actually seen a mainframe? by mjwx · · Score: 1

      Have you ever actually laid eyes on a mainframe? You seem to be confusing them with low-budget HPC clusters. IBM is the largest mainframe vendor and I can assure you that they are not "a bunch of PC servers with Infiniband."

      I have, we carted it out and replaced it with some system P's.

      Yes, a lot of applications that used tor require mainframes now run on clusters of system P's or even X86-64 blades running VMWare. Thats how far servers have progressed.

      Whilst I 100% agree that a mainframe is not "just a bunch of servers that are interconnected" they are being replaced by a bunch of servers that are interconnected because the performance of clusters has reached a point where they can replace mainframes in most applications and have several advantages like using off-the-shelf and easy to replace hardware and cheap/easy redundancy.

      Mainframes are really only used for very specialised applications these days.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
    10. Re:Have you ever actually seen a mainframe? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The new model of Mainframes do have infiniband capability for disk.

  55. win8 and UEFI by ka9dgx · · Score: 3, Insightful
    The combination of Windows 8 and UEFI BIOS makes it now impossible to buy a general purpose PC in a typical retail store. The new machines won't boot linux or Win7.

    Who would buy a PC you can't use?

    1. Re:win8 and UEFI by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      UEFI or BIOS? make up your mind. Also, linux and Widows 7 are totally capable of booting on UEFI.

    2. Re:win8 and UEFI by baka_toroi · · Score: 1

      Where did you get this information?

    3. Re:win8 and UEFI by Alter_3d · · Score: 1

      WTF are you talking about? Every Win8 branded system I have seen has the option to disable Secure Boot. IIRC Microsoft requires that the computer has the ability to switch it off to grant the Win8-Certified Logo. That is of course, except Windows RT devices, which have nothing to do with what we are talking about.

    4. Re:win8 and UEFI by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      WTF are you living? You can just pick the parts and let store staff assemble them - no OEM crapware, nothing unwanted.

    5. Re:win8 and UEFI by ka9dgx · · Score: 1

      2 different purchases, and subsequent returns. 1 Toshiba, 1 Lenovo 64 bit bios on both

    6. Re:win8 and UEFI by Alter_3d · · Score: 1

      2 different purchases, and subsequent returns. 1 Toshiba, 1 Lenovo 64 bit bios on both

      Do you have the models? I still do not believe that Secure Boot cannot be turned off.

    7. Re:win8 and UEFI by tepples · · Score: 1

      You can just pick the parts and let store staff assemble them

      How would one go about 1. discovering that there even exist computer stores that do kit builds, 2. finding a reputable one, and 3. finding a parts list for a laptop?

  56. Didn't need a PC in the first place by Larry_Dillon · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Many people are finding that they didn't need a PC in the first place when all they do is light web browsing and posting on Facebook. Previous to the smartphone/tablet, they needed a PC to do that. I think we'll see more special-purpose devices taking over functions that were previously relegated to the general-purpose PC.

    --
    Competition Good, Monopoly Bad.
    1. Re:Didn't need a PC in the first place by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I seriously doubt any of my kids will ever own a desktop computer since they manage to do all of their gaming and online activities on an xbox and android phones. {unless of course one decides to go into IT which is also doubtful}

  57. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by UnknowingFool · · Score: 1

    That's not the real issue. What do most people need computers to begin with? They are not 3D modeling or doing highly computational mathematics. They needed a computer to surf the web, do email, and maybe now and then create documents. Leveraging all 6 cores of a Phenom for Excel so that a family can track their expenses isn't really worth a programmer's time is it? Gaming has been the only area where hardware/software has been pushed but not everyone is a hardcore gamer.

    --
    Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
  58. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by Known+Nutter · · Score: 1

    What else did I miss?

    Well...

    Good luck using a tablet for tasks such as Photoshop or Blender.

    --
    Beware of the Leopard.
  59. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Only the era of the PC as an entertainment device"

    Yes, clearly entertainment on PC is dead. There's no such thing as Netflix or Steam, those are just myths.

  60. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by rolfwind · · Score: 1

    The problem is that there is no killer app that needs to be tamed by new PC hardware. Any killer apps there days are more likely going to be on phones and need to be tamed by phones sized hardware.

    Maybe one comes out one day, maybe with games, 3D, holographic screens, but right now it's all kinda meh.

    I think I seen this coming when GHz stopped climbing in the early 00s as well. You can wrench out more power with all the other tricks, but this was the easiest way. Even these days, I can feel when that GHz limit has an impact, as a program brings a core to it's max and just stays there, because it or some subfunction isn't made for multicore, and then with a single CPU chomping away at it, I feel like I'm back in 2003 again in terms of processor speed.

  61. Pity the Poor Susidized Geek by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The "real" fallout will be the decline in quality hardware.

    First will come the Castoffs as cheap discounts.. like Compuland closing

    Then will come the rising costs for Boutique Computer Components.. like a legacy high performance video card

    Finally all you'll be able to get will be Gamer Computer components at the high end whose cost justify why they're still on the market

    Whoe is Us.. we're gonna have to pay bazillions for all the cheap stuff we take for granted now.

  62. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by BrokenHalo · · Score: 1

    Android is now reinventing Desktop environments, they are all the way up to Tiling window managers! Next comes overlapping windows and then full compositing.

    And I might find myself welcoming the day. In the meantime, my cheapie Asus laptop running Slackware/KDE4.10.5 works pretty well for most of what I do. However it pans out, I don't want to be stuck with a touchscreen keypad for my main interface. That's fine for a dinky thing like a phone, but for "real" work I want a proper keyboard.

  63. Scroll Wheels by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why are people satisfied with 1080p. [?]

    Main reason? Scroll wheels.

    If you're looking at a long web page, text document, or spreadsheet, you're going to be scrolling back and forth all day anyway. A 10% increase in vertical resolution doesn't change that and is not worth paying extra for.

  64. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

    You really should look more into the wonders of bluetooth.

    Mice, headphones, speakers, all kinds of fun stuff. You can even get some pretty massive tablets with great screen resolution.

  65. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by BrokenHalo · · Score: 1

    Quite apart from the screen real-estate issues, it seems to me that using a touchscreen would be fairly strenuous for any serious amount of input. It's probably OK for something like Twitter, but for real input, you need a real keyboard.

  66. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If so, good thing I just bought a gaming PC with all the bells and whistles. Cost a bunch too.
    32 GB RAM, i7, full SSD, one of the latest GeForce, 3.8 GHz there's very little this baby cannot do.

    The latest XBox, PlayStation, Nintendo and certainly not any laptop I've ever tried, ever came up with such raw power and flexibility.
    If anything, this newfound competition will hopefully make PC-makers rethink their strategy of fucking their customers over (my first GeForce was DOA), and start the process of rethinking what is a good customer experience (no, preinstalled JUNK does not constitute a "good customer experience"). THIS IS A GOOD THING!

    Looking forward to Occulus Rift and VR reinnovating the PC-markets. You don't see the future by looking in the backmirror. You only see the past.

    Captcha: tableau

  67. Got what I need by EmperorOfCanada · · Score: 2

    I have what I need and it is quite old. I wouldn't mind an upgrade but I don't have to get one. Plus if I do want an upgrade I will buy a used machine where someone put the best of everything into it 3 years ago.

    Most desktops can be repaired for around $70 so they can last until they are so old it becomes silly. Laptops are way less repairable and more breakable so they vanish from the pool of used machines faster.

    But one factor keeping laptops running is that when the batteries die people just turn them into desktops and are happy with the mobility of their phones and tablets.

    The biggest factor keeping people away from new machines is the relentless bloatware infesting most new machines. We ./'rs can remove that crap in a second but for most users they are stuck with the stuff and the various ads annoy and scare them.

  68. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, tablets work really well when you add enough peripherals to turn them into laptops.

  69. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by Nemyst · · Score: 2

    I didn't know Android and iOS ran Blender or Photoshop. Plus, if you're buying an expensive large tablet with a mouse, speakers, keyboard, probably a USB hub so you can plug more than one peripheral, you might as well buy a computer with a touch screen, it's going to be less cumbersome...

  70. Capability, compatibility and change by JoeCommodore · · Score: 2

    This is probably the most fitting, in my perspective, folks think their PCs are "fast enough" and "capable enough" that when they are tight on money will put off purchasing a new one.

    Windows 8 certainly isn't a reason people are scrambling to upgrade, not only do you get something different (change==bad to most non techies), you loose compatibility with some of the hardware and more importantly the older software you already have. This includes DVD playback.

    You want sales you have to offer carrots, give the consumers more capability, less restrictions, bundle in Office... something that the consumer would think, wow, "I gotta get me one of those!"

    --
    "Enjoy what you're doing! If it becomes drudgery, you're doing it wrong!" - Jim Butterfield
  71. The PC is not dead by kimvette · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The PC is not dead. For Windows, it was nearly perfected with Windows 7. Intel's Core i5 and i7 plus NVIDIA or AMD GPUs + 16GB RAM + SSD deliver the computing power of supercomputers from just a few years ago, and complete everyday tasks almost instantly. Why do people need to buy a PC that is only marginally faster, only to downgrade to Windows 8.n which is user-hostile on the desktop?

    Tablets are new and rapidly advancing and people are buying them to do many things (snapshots, social networking, light web browsing) on the go, on their sofa, etc. but not to actually replace their PCs. Nearly any PC made in the last five years is "good enough" so why replace it before it fails?

    The PC isn't dead; the market is simply saturated with computers that are finally "good enough" and a new computer is a downgrade thanks to Microsoft forcing the tablet UI upon everyone. I've had to install Classic Shell for Windows 8 users who are novices and complained the OS is unusable, so you can't convince me at all that Windows 8 is good for newbies.

    Then for business, the Metro^H^H^H^H^HModern interface breaks usability and productivity; Windows 2.0's "innovative" overlapping windows (not so innovative actually - it was copied from Amiga) is removed. I don't know about you but when I am doing any kind of sysadmin or development work, I often have five to seven applications open, often overlapped so I can read documenation as I write scripts and code, or even work on spreadsheets.

    I'd like Windows 8 if it came with the Aero interface and still supported glass, and the touch UI could be enabled as a choice - or even if it were the default and could be turned off, and if Metro apps could be moved around freely rather than be confined to full screen or tiled. I don't know about you, but even if I cared about touch screens on desktops and laptops, it would be a very secondary UI for me, because I want to keep my hands on the keyboard and mouse. I'm not new to touch screens either - I've been a PDA/tablet fan since WinCE. I own PocketPC (which I still use on occasion), iOS, and Android PDAs and tablets, and have used Windows XP tablets and each is great for its purpose, but when I did use the XP tablet as a desktop, I docked it and used only the keyboard and mouse. I never once used the touch screen while it was docked, nor would I bother with Win8's touch screen on a desktop or laptop.

    --
    The Christian Right is Neither (Christian nor right). See: Matthew 23, Matthew 25, Ezekiel 16:48-50
    1. Re:The PC is not dead by painandgreed · · Score: 1

      The PC isn't dead; the market is simply saturated with computers that are finally "good enough"....

      While I would agree that computers are finally "good enough" and older computers have less of an need to be upgraded as two year computer replacement in the business because three year and now is around five if not longer depending on the work it does, that environments such as business are now simply "saturated". In the last ten years that I have been working at my job, it finally reached the point where it became a way of thinking that every person and every station at work needs a computer. Before it was just office workers, and now, as things shifted over to being computer controlled and paperless workflows, everybody gets a computer. Even in the household, single computer families have instead gone to everybody gets their own computer families as a standard. Not only does everybody now have a computer but those computers are good enough to still do what needed to be done and thus get replaced less often.

  72. ominous portents for AMD? by edxwelch · · Score: 1

    The report says most of the decline is from the collapse of the mini notebook market. AMD's main competitive product these days is it's Brazos and Kabini APUs. It's high end Richland/Pildriver CPUs are not selling at all.

  73. Re: This is the slope before the cliff by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This comment is nailed it 400 times over again.

  74. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by spire3661 · · Score: 1

    Hell i run a small minecraft server and a VM on my HTPC's 4GB of ram. This is on top of the recording 4 HD channels at once and then compressing them down every night.

    --
    Good-bye
  75. just more selfishness by FranTaylor · · Score: 1

    The desktop industry will have to adapt at some point

    No they don't HAVE to adapt.

    the above is honestly the best idea for everyone.

    No, it's the best idea for YOU. Your idea SUCKS from a low-cost perspective. Connectors cost MORE than chips, not less. They are the #1 failure mode on computers, each connector adds more risk of failure and warranty expense.

    Have you noticed the trend toward FEWER and FEWER connectors on computers? This is why!

    And this is from someone that screws around with hardware and the like.

    If you eat twinkies every day, does this make you an expert on how to make a better twinkie?

    1. Re:just more selfishness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bah.
      Everyone has to adapt.
      Low-cost != best opportunity (for learning, for tweaking, for owning your own)
      Partly thanks to esata my latest gaming computer has more connectors I've ever had on a stationary before.
      I eat buns. I like'm with raisins. If you offer me chocholate buns, I will laugh at you and not give you my money.

  76. Microsoft by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    is the driving force behind the decline in PC sales. Windows 8 and the Metro interface, is such "a turn off", it is keeping many away from new PC purchases.

  77. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by jedidiah · · Score: 1

    > That's not the real issue. What do most people need computers to begin with?

    They don't need the "power". They need the form factor. Tablets are basically a PC locked down to nothing but a one button mouse. For a lot of tasks, that just isn't good enough.

    For a lot of trivial tasks, it's tolerable though.

    The PC wasn't a new way of interacting with programs. It was just an older style machine that was under the full control of the end user. That level of control was what made the PC, not the keyboard or mouse or monitor.

    --
    A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  78. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by h4rr4r · · Score: 2

    I think Microsoft has a tablet product that does run those programs. No one really uses it though.

    The point I was trying to make that you keep avoiding is that there is no line between tablet and computer. A tablet is a kind of computer and a normal PC can be used basically the same way as a tablet. For me the best part of that form factor is taking one machine everywhere. Ideally my smartphone would dock and be able to use my normal set of peripherals, then when I go to a meeting become a laptop by docking, and then when I go out to dinner and need driving directions I can just use it as it.

  79. It's a matter of needs by BenJeremy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Performance isn't as much of a factor any more - a 7 year old PC will browse the web and get your e-mail just as well as a brand new one. Monitor resolutions are stagnating at 1080p... video cards that are 3 generations old still play games great on single 1080p monitors.

    In short, for most people (gaming enthusiasts and developers excluded), older PCs still work fine, so WHY UPGRADE?

    Yeah, maybe a new PC will boot in 10 seconds, or that office app will launch in 50% of the time as the old one, but when that 50% is only another 2 seconds, who cares?

    There was a time when improvements in PCs were more dramatic - you could FEEL the change performance between one PC and the next, but we've entered an era of diminishing returns with those performance improvements. Sure, we will see good improvements in media encoding time, or see lag on a game that is run on 3 monitors, but most people don't do these things all the time, or even some of the time.

    This is why PC sales have dropped. Everybody who needs a computer has them, and most people are ok with the computer they have, until it breaks down. This obviously will slow down sales.

    1. Re:It's a matter of needs by Mirar · · Score: 1

      I hope this doesn't mean that they will make computers that break down after 3 years...

      (Or wait, the last 2 laptops I got did exactly that...?!)

    2. Re:It's a matter of needs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My upgrade rule was always 'if its twice as fast for around the same price, will spend the cash'. Broadly speaking this held up well from the 90s onwards. Once you hit 2007 or so the improvements were much less. Sure a 2013 i5 is a fair bit faster than its 2010 equivalent, but forking out a ton of cash for a 20% speed increase isn't worth it for the majority of people.

      Also I have a feeling companies are going to lose their shirts (particularly Microsoft) in the tablet market. I bought a cheapo Acer tablet the other week. £80, stuck a memory card in and it does pretty much everything I need. While Apple & maybe Samsung will be able to sell their premium kit it looks to me like casual tablet buyers will settle for cheaper efforts. There's little point in paying £500 for an iPad for a kid when something a fifth of the price will suffice. By this time next year the £100 devices will have the same specs as the likes of the Nexus now.

      Think of all the companies pushing horribly expensive tablets. Sure, they're pretty clever but outside of some niche markets the average buyer will steer well clear. If you've got the money for a premium tablet you may as well get an iPad and not some horrid Windows 8 thing.

      Which brings me to Windows 8 - some nice under the hood improvements but as an OS is hideous. Every comp advert you see on TV proudly features some Metro front screen. They may as well have wallpaper saying 'Don't buy this, its shit'.

  80. I blame..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Windows 8.....

  81. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by Somebody+Is+Using+My · · Score: 1

    Also, it's not so much that PC sales are declining as returning to a norm.

    Starting in the late '90s, everybody got a computer because prices for the hardware were so low, the economy was still strong and the Internet was new and exciting. But many of those new computer users had no real use for a general-purpose computing device that had as much capability as a PC and even if the machine itself didn't end up gathering dust in the corner, rarely would it be used to its full capabilities.

    Nowadays, smaller and more specialized devices - MP3 players, smartphones, tablets - offer the desired subset of a full PCs capabilities in a more convenient and easier to use form factor. True, a $100 tablet might not be able to play a high-resolution video-game or let you program the next Call of Duty, but it can probably surf the web, play MP3s and send email. Plus, it's far cheaper, usually simpler to use and takes up much less space.

    Basically, all those people who had no use for a computer have stopped buying them. There was a bubble in PC sales, but it's popped leaving PC manufactures with a smaller - but more regular - customer base.

  82. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by jedidiah · · Score: 1

    > Yes, clearly entertainment on PC is dead. There's no such thing as Netflix or Steam, those are just myths.

    Both of those are already more effectively delivered to the average consumer through some sort of speciality appliance. Game consoles have been the primary focus of the likes of EA for a long time now. Netflix is something that you can do with a $60 appliance.

    Comparatively speaking, something like Netflix sucks on a PC. It's a poorly optimized resource hog demanding far better specs than the task really calls for.

    One problem with PCs is that coders are used to being lazy.

    --
    A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  83. Re: This is the slope before the cliff by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    LOL auto complete.

  84. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by spire3661 · · Score: 1

    They will eventually. You would do better if you used the terms 'mobile' vs 'workstation' instead. Tossing out 'tablets' as just toys is going to get you flamed.

    --
    Good-bye
  85. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by UnknowingFool · · Score: 1

    They don't need the "power". They need the form factor. Tablets are basically a PC locked down to nothing but a one button mouse. For a lot of tasks, that just isn't good enough.

    For a lot of "your" tasks it isn't good enough. Looking at Facebook posts requires no more than a touch interface.

    The PC wasn't a new way of interacting with programs. It was just an older style machine that was under the full control of the end user. That level of control was what made the PC, not the keyboard or mouse or monitor.

    The PC grew out of the legacy of mainframes and mini-computers. The PCs is essentially a less powerful workstation. In the past, the hardware needed to be better every few years to keep up with basic functionality and the PC was the only thing that could handle it. Smartphones were not quite capable yet. Tablets were essentially laptops with a touchscreen back then. These days, quad-core machines are more than adequate to handle what most users do. Tablets can do what most people need them to do.

    --
    Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
  86. 100% of computer users want waterproof models by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes they should. If you feel like swimming and I do too, then 100% of users surveyed want waterproof models. Or is that not how this works?

  87. Lack of Innovation and Overall HW Requirements. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Alot of you have touched on the point, but I feel the need to go a little deeper on this. The way I see it, there has been a combination of little innovation and little need to upgrade PC components in the last 4-6 years or more.

    I remember the days when PC games weren't ports of console games or weren't codeveloped for PCs and consoles. In times like these, new games with ever increasing hardware demands were released so often that unless I upgraded components on a 6 month basis and built a new computer every year and a half to 2 year, my computer couldn't run the latest games.

    Today, while I've since built a second computer for other things, the system I built for Crysis 1 is still able to run nearly everything I throw at it. PC games haven't made big leaps and bounds in requirements for a number of years now.

    Strangely, this goes even deeper than PC games though. Outside of gaming, software and operating systems hardware requirements really haven't changed much since Windows XP. Hard Disk capacity, memory and processor capabilties has substantially increased while the overall requirements of the OS hasn't changed proportionally like one would expect.

    Combine these two situations with tablets which covers alot of typical usage of the average computer user (non slashdotters) and you get a product that has no demand by consumers because there is no demand by the software and there are cheaper alternatives that do the job just as well.

    PC computing is becoming a niche market again like it was before it went mainstream. While I don't think the death of the PC is here, there is a definite downturn that only now are PC manufacturers and component vendors beginning to understand.

  88. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Seriously? Good luck using a tablet for Photoshop? Photoshop is awesome on tablets that can run it. I've opted for convertibles specifically for Photoshop/Art Rage/etc... Regular tablets are finally getting to the point they can run that software, so I may be picking up a Surface Pro soon.

  89. Re:No software exists to justify buying new hardwa by Meeni · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Not niche, it is becoming an appliance. Everybody already have one. The exponential growth and amazement period has passed. So you keep what you have until it breaks. There is no (big) money to make on this kind of market anymore. It is just another mature market, like dishwashers. We are seeing the transition from boom market to appliance market.

  90. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Good luck using a tablet for tasks such as Photoshop..."

    Seriously, I can't imagine Photoshop being any good on a lightweight, portable, digitizer equipped display... Who would possibly think that would be a good idea?

    You should give it a shot. Photoshop on my convertibles, and more recently my tablet, is great.

  91. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by hairyfeet · · Score: 2

    Buy more RAM dude! Seriously you should buy more while the prices are cheap, because there is NEVER such a thing as "too much RAM". I don't how Linux handles large RAM but in Win 7 the 8GB in my desktop is frequently filled with cache so everything loads quicker, and on my netbook that 8GB means that once the desktop is loaded its ALL running in RAM so the drive stays parked giving me better battery life. Sadly I had a sick family member when DDR 2 was cheap so now it'd cost out the Ying Yang to fill my desktop with the 4GB modules its capable of running, it'd be cheaper to replace the board and switch to DDR 3 than to just get more RAM with the price of 4GB DDR-2 modules.

    As far as GPUs? Look at the HD7750 and HD7770, they score close to the HD6850 in benches while using less than half the power and heat, the HD7750 will even run without needing external power. But even with new consoles thanks to MSFT and Sony choosing a netbook chip (The Jaguar is based on Bobcat, an ULV netbook APU) I have a feeling anybody with a quad or better,like me with my hexa, is only gonna need a GPU upgrade and NOT toss the whole system like last time. Personally that is fine with me, I figure the HD7770s will hit the $70-$80 price point this fall so I'll just toss the HD4850 in the parts bin and keep on truckin'.

    --
    ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
  92. Funny that I've bought more than ever! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The funny thing is that I've been on a computer buying spree lately. I replaced an old Dell Windows 2000 PC that had run over a decade flawlessly - kind of sad because no one makes them that good any longer - just because it was too slow and obsolete even to use as a browsing kiosk. I got a cheap Asus laptop to run Win8 just to check it out, and a recent Mac Book Pro as a lightweight laptop. If Windows 8 had not been such a phenomenal flop, I would have gotten a touch screen, but I'm not going to bother now.

    But my desktop Core i7 is ... my goodness, I can't even remember when I built it (two? three? years ago), but nothing faster has come along. Where is the i9? If Intel made a chip that would run the Android simulator faster, I'd be upgrading right now. Computers have simply stalled out. Today's Core i5 or Core i7 is the same as last year's, and the year before that. I buy best-of-breed components (especially the power supply) so mine just keep on keeping on.

  93. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

    Which is why you can add a mouse and keyboard to them.

    There are already devices that ship with them. Even some that dock a smartphone.

  94. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by endus · · Score: 1

    The PC is here to stay. What we are seeing is a longer life cycle. There is no need to update the hardware these days, there's plenty of power and storage for people writing the odd letter/email, social media and most games. Unless you're a developer or working with huge amounts of media data, PC users aren't going to notice a shit load of RAM, loads of cores CPU and a GPU capable of real-time Avatar level of rendering.

    This is exactly what I was going to reply. There haven't been significant advancements in processing power, or in applications which require that increased power. Everyone has what they need. They'll replace them when they break or maybe upgrade them once in a while, but there's no need for the turnover we used to see...we've reached a point of diminishing returns where upgrading every 2 years or less just isn't worth it.

  95. There are people who don't even know... by Yaddoshi · · Score: 1

    ...what a PC is. They think it stands for "politically correct", if they think at all. They also believe that the internet only exists on their iPhone or iPad, and cannot conceive of the idea that the internet is available on a computer.

  96. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 1

    Case in point: For years I've been doing everything from Photoshop to to-do lists on a 17" laptop, my reasoning being that I can take my whole computing environment on the road with me. On this month's trip I borrowed a tablet to take with me to a conference instead of lugging the laptop. And guess what - for the browsing, email and occasional word processing I do on the road, the tablet worked incredibly well. It's a breeze to take through airports, too. A tablet stays in my bag, without that heart-stopping period of knowing that my MacBook Pro is on display to all as it passes through the X-ray machine in a bin of its own while I pray before the body scanner. And because the tablet is not my entire computing environment, I don't have to carry all of its accessories with me on the road. When I'm out there in hotel conference rooms and coffeeshops, my load is a lot lighter. If I do lose one, it will be lot easier to replace. So when I replace the laptop, it's going to be with a power desktop in the home office and a tablet with BT keyboard for the road. If I absolutely, critically need a forgotten document or a run of Photoshop when I'm traveling, I can always VPN into my "mainframe" from wherever I may be.

  97. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by Gr8Apes · · Score: 1

    Currently tablets are not capable of running either of those programs well. They simply do not have the power. That will change, but not for a while. There is also the question of screen real estate. Photoshop on a 2560x1600 27"+ screen is a whole different experience from a 960x540 5" screen, for example, or even a linked 60" 1920x1080 TV.

    --
    The cesspool just got a check and balance.
  98. PC sales will never catch up with phone/tablet by beefoot · · Score: 1

    I buy a phone every 1 to 2 years. I buy a tablet for everyone in my household including my 2 years old son. I buy a PC for myself and wife every 4-5 years.

  99. 'longest duration of decline' in history by nitehawk214 · · Score: 1

    I would have expected the longest duration of decline in history to be the Roman Empire, that thing took centuries to collapse.

    --
    I'm a good cook. I'm a fantastic eater. - Steven Brust
  100. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 1

    I upgraded to 8 GB specifically to compress video. Adding the extra ram really improved GUI responsiveness. It's probably highly inaccurate to analogize this to running my GUI/browser/games/etc on one core, and my compression on the other core, but that's what it felt like after adding the extra ram.

    ram is cheap. Don't skimp.

  101. Since when are tablets not PCs? by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 1

    Since when are tablets not PCs? PC=Personal Computer. First PCs were desktops, then there were the portables, like Compaq that were the size of a suitcase. Then we had laptops, then notebooks, then netbooks, and now tablets. Aren't they all personal computers? Or does Gartner's use of PC somehow mean Windows desktop/laptop/notebook/netbook computers only?

    In practical terms there are personal computers where the person owns and manages them and there are non-personal computers where somebody else owns and manages them (mini computers, main frames, super computers and arrays come to mind). Whether a personal computer has a keyboard or not is no more a distinguishing factor than whether a car has a manual or automatic transmission.

    Sales of personal computers has not declined and is actually accelerating. Sales of personal computers with keyboards is on a decline. In other news, sales of wifi keyboards to use with tablets has been increasing at a steady pace.

    1. Re:Since when are tablets not PCs? by cpghost · · Score: 1

      Since when are tablets not PCs?

      Since you can't boot your own operating system on them. Technically, tablets are computers, but they are not the kind of open computer that we use(d) to call PCs.

      --
      cpghost at Cordula's Web.
  102. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by dugancent · · Score: 1

    I know of no one, including myself, that streams Netflix on a computer. I use a Roku and my iPad.

    --
    SJWs are the new boogeyman. -Me
  103. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by Hentes · · Score: 2

    Now, this signals that PCs have been universally adopted. Now that everybody has one, the sales will obviously decline. But this only means that the growth period of PCs is over, and that personal computing has reached maturity.

  104. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1

    What do most people need computers to begin with? They are not 3D modeling or doing highly computational mathematics. They needed a computer to surf the web, do email, and maybe now and then create documents.

    They (the majority of people) are not 3D modelling or doing highly complex mathematics, or expiermenting with music, or simulations, or art, or anything beyond the box, because the software is not there. The software is not there because programmers themselves believe that computers are now for surfing the web, email, MS Office, and playing Angry Birds.

    And this might be tolerable if things just stood still, but instead they're going backwards as the new generation of programmers decides that Personal Computers should be even less usable. File Manger in Windows 3.11 was a very usuable and understandable application. I bought an android tablet recently which dind't even have a file manager. Those which could be downloaded made operations like copy and paste into nigh dystopian process. Don't even get me started on inputing and editing text on this device.

    Yet, we see tablet concepts actually bleeding back into the desktop, making it even less usable. It's as though programmers have collectively decided to dumb down device they once used to create entire universe in, and to make possible things which others had never even imagined. The potential of PCs is being put back into the box.

    --
    May the Maths Be with you!
  105. I'd recommend tablets to all low-end users by GodfatherofSoul · · Score: 1

    Get yourself a really nice tablet for browsing from the couch, in bed, or on the road. But, you STILL need a decent PC for typing up that occasional document. High-end tablet and low-end PC is perfect for the general user. People erroneously go for the laptop when what they want is something uber-portable not semi-portable (there are some cool laptop-tablet combos out there).

    I figured this out as a movie buff who loves looking up actors and movies on the fly from my couch.

    --
    I swear to God...I swear to God! That is NOT how you treat your human!
  106. Not us by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    2 adults, 2 kids. 1 new Samsung "smart" phone that no one wants to use -- I charge it once a month "just in case". Each of us has a dumb phone that can call & text, and we are all very happy with our phones. PCs? A dozen or so.

  107. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 1

    Have you actually used a 386? Not a computer that you think is equivalent to a 386. Not a 386-class computer, but an actual 80386 computer with 2 megabytes of memory, and a 500 megabyte hard drive, and a 256 color 320x200 display?

  108. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

    Go check out XenApp, they don't have to run it locally. With fast enough networks the latency is simply trivial.

    960x540 has not been an acceptable phone nor tablet resolution for a quite a while.

  109. PC Sales are not dropping at all by Cito · · Score: 1

    They are looking only at numbers of the "integrated" systems... Acer, Dell, Compaq.. yes those sales are down cause they sell shit. Heck even in the 90's you were picked on for owning such a integrated system, Packard Bell was the biggest pile of crap pushing out non upgradable systems left and right.

    So for brand name pc's sales are down, but it's because PC users have gotten smart, we build are own.

    and if you look at those numbers, people who buy motherboards, cpu, ram, hard drives, cases you will notice the numbers have never went down.

    Cyberpower PC states their sales have been the highest ever in 2012 and are on target to breaking last year's records in 2013.

    Newegg's blog stated their CPU and barebone sales have been up the lasts 3 years as more and more pc users put their own systems together and know what they want.

    rather than some Dell, Acer, Compaq throwing together crap parts, pc users pick and choose their parts and build themself. Or they pay someone to build the pc for them like Cyberpower where you pick the parts and they put it together for you with or without an operating system.

    In those cases PC sales are actually up higher than ever. It's just people have moved from an integrated PC platform and PC users now "roll their own" and sales are higher than integrated pc makers.

    If Dell, Compaq, Acer went out of business it wouldn't harm PC users one bit, we still buy our parts and put them together ourselves.

    hell my "frankenstein" gaming pc is an Intel Core I-7 cpu, 16 gigs of kingston ram, a Kingston 120gig SSD system drive, a Western digital black 1tb data drive, an asus motherboard, Nvidia graphics card, etc etc

    all different brands and parts i bought seperately and I buy new pc's every couple years.

    PC sales are not down, go read the blogs of companies that sell these parts and barebone systems. Sales are only down for the shit systems that corporate buys in bulk like Dell/Acer/Compaq

  110. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by UnknowingFool · · Score: 1

    File Manger in Windows 3.11 was a very usuable and understandable application. I bought an android tablet recently which dind't even have a file manager. Those which could be downloaded made operations like copy and paste into nigh dystopian process. Don't even get me started on inputing and editing text on this device.

    But you are confusing what you would have done and what was needed to be done in the past. Why do you need a file manager if you are not administrating files? It's the complaint I heard when Apple did not include file management from iTunes/iPod ecosystem. One reason consumers needed file management was because that was the only way to move music from computer to device. With iTunes users synced up using the software only and it removed the need for users to manually manage files. Power users balked at it because it means they gave up control; however, the control hindering using the device as before the iPod: file directories were one of the few ways users categorized music. With iTunes/iPod, it categorized music according to metadata like playlist, Artist, Genre, Album, etc. Such metadata required that music files be exactly where iTunes had put them. A user changing the location would mess things up.

    Yet, we see tablet concepts actually bleeding back into the desktop, making it even less usable. It's as though programmers have collectively decided to dumb down device they once used to create entire universe in, and to make possible things which others had never even imagined. The potential of PCs is being put back into the box.

    Maybe at the GUI level like Win 8. I use command line to get a lot of things done.

    --
    Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
  111. PCs are becoming like heavy trucks by Animats · · Score: 1

    Think of the desktop PC industry as being akin to the heavy truck industry. (A "heavy truck" means anything bigger than a pickup or van.) Heavy trucks move around most of the stuff in the world. Most larger businesses of own or lease some heavy trucks. Almost all businesses use shipping services that operate heavy trucks. They're an essential component of doing business, and they're not going away.

    Heavy trucks work well, are used until they wear out, and are then replaced. About 2 million heavy trucks are produced per year worldwide. Nobody gets a new heavy truck because a new model just came out. New heavy trucks are better than older models, but not by much.

    That's the role of the desktop PC today. Businesses need them and will buy them, use them until they wear out, then buy new ones. Some people will have them at home, and those are the people who had a typewriter at home before computers.

  112. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 1

    Adobe has released a version of photoshop for iOS. Photoshop Express is Free; Photoshop Touch is not.

    OTOH, they may be stretching the limits of the "Photoshop" brand.

  113. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by dcw3 · · Score: 1

    For a lot of "your" tasks it isn't good enough. Looking at Facebook posts requires no more than a touch interface.

    Yeah, I look at FB on my iPad, but for creating any posts, it's not good enough. Maybe if I had one of those addon keyboards, it would be better, but I've yet to see one that's worth a shit. Typing at 70+wpm on a real keyboard, beats using a screen keypad anyday.

    --
    Just another day in Paradise
  114. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by walshy007 · · Score: 1

    Even if not used for programs, that ram can be handy. Linux uses it as filesystem cache which is a hell of a lot quicker than ssd.

  115. Wake up? by TheSkepticalOptimist · · Score: 1

    Companies like Microsoft, Dell, HP, and any other OEM PC maker need to wake up and realize this isn't a slump, it's a death spiral.

    Yes there is a niche market for PC's now. Developers need PC's to actually create the applications and content used by mobile platforms. Many enterprise operations still require a proper PC to do things properly. Hard core gamers will never use a tablet or a console as their means to waste hours a day until those platform match or exceed the performance of a PC, and include a laggless mouse and keyboard combo..

    However the rest of the world has move past PC's. Its not a question of form-factor, price, performance, or quality of OS running on it. There is no killer app or OS that will lure people back to the PC platform, there is no price point that will make people say, hey, lets revisit the desktop. Even if PC's got 100 times more powerful people have obvious indicated they do not care about performance if they can update their Facebook status on a phone with 1/100 the processing power of a modern desktop or laptop. To say that PC's will regain popularity among the masses is to also suggest that the abacus could make a comeback if you invest enough money into the platform.

    PC is a deprecated platform relegated to a niche market that is waiting for Tablets to catch up performance wise.

    There is also a generation of people that will NEVER buy a PC. Children today are growing up on a Tablet, and will see no reason to ever invest in the platform and will only use one if their job requires it.

    Also I will see a shift eventually where the PC simply morphs into a Tablet, in which case you could argue that PC's as "Personal Computers" have made a comeback. But "traditional" platforms such as a desktop shoebox and clamshell laptops will disappear altogether.

    --
    I haven't thought of anything clever to put here, but then again most of you haven't either.
    1. Re:Wake up? by clawhound · · Score: 1

      My daughter LOVES to sit at my computer. It has two screens. She can play flash games on it. She prints on a 10 year old color printer (USB 1) using 3rd party ink. Tablets just don't do that. As for niche market, business isn't going away any time soon. Ergonomic needs will always prevail. The need for multitasking will prevail. The need for vast real estait will prevail. I know of no business which plans on ditching the PC. (They might exist, but I don't know about them.)

  116. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by lgw · · Score: 1

    All of that is true, but why would you?

    The distinction is all form factor now. Do you want something in your pocket, something you carry, or something that gives you a full workstation at a desk?

    The only reason to have a docking station for a tablet is because it's hard to move files back and forth between your devices, but for people content to use the cloud that's a non-issue. Why connect "all that great stuff" to a tablet instead of just having a tablet and a PC?

    --
    Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  117. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by lgw · · Score: 1

    I do - I bought a laptop (Windows 8 even, since it hardly matters) just to be my home theater head unit. It plays all of the media files on my server effortlessly, streams Netflix, Youtube, and stupid one-off web video crap, streams every sort of online radio station, it's my one interface for everything now.

    I used Roku for a while, tried a WD box that was recommended to me, but they just sucked at playing stuff from my media server. "Supports h264" just doesn't mean "supports it no matter how it was ripped", plus they just sucked at browsing a large media collection.

    --
    Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  118. Storage capacities matter too by cpghost · · Score: 1

    I know more and more people AND corps who would rather opt for real servers that can host 18 to 24 SATA disks at once, rather than for PCs with their limited set of 4 or so SATA ports. Add to this that it is easier to upgrade RAMs in server-grade machines than on classic PCs, and you've got a shift in demand. I fully expect classic PCs to be phased out in favor of server-grade PCs (a la supermicro or so) on one side, and by tablets and other small portable gadgets on the other side.

    --
    cpghost at Cordula's Web.
  119. Mainframes don't exist? by sirwired · · Score: 2

    Redundant internal engineering and resulting high reliability and security
    Extensive input-output facilities
    Strict backward compatibility with older software
    High hardware and computational utilization rates to support massive throughput

    There's no drive to design machines this way anymore? Somebody better tell IBM, as they haven't gotten the memo. They keep rolling out new models and customers keep buying them. (I think the latest estimates are that they are, after all these years, still responsible for about 40% of IBM's net profit.)

    While they get little respect, IBM mainframes still meet all of those requirements (and no other significant architectures do.) The toughest is the backwards compatibility. You can, with a daisy-chain of dusty interface adapters, load any punch-card-based program (or a reel of tape), and run them just as if you would on a S/360 from the 1960's without changing a single line of code. And you can do this with a box just rolling off the line in Poughkeepsie today. It doesn't even involve a troublesome and bug-prone software emulator; every instruction supported on an S/360 is supported with current processors natively.

    The I/O capabilities are still massive, and it's quite common for a mainframe to have more space dedicated to I/O adapters than CPU modules. (It's only in the last couple of years that the I/O offload capabilities on PC/UNIX boxes have come anywhere near to what mainframes have been doing since the 70's.)

    And due to their cost and licensing structure, most of them do indeed run flat-out as much as possible.

  120. That'll teach me. by sirwired · · Score: 1

    That'll teach me to post before Googling. It makes sense that coupling links (previously using wholly propriatary "magic") would shift to Infiniband to save cost.

  121. HPC != Mainframe by sirwired · · Score: 1

    I don't doubt that the Top500 list has a bunch of iDataPlex boxes on it; it's built from the ground up to be a budget-oriented pre-integrated HPC solution.

    But nobody at IBM, even the most greedy iDataPlex sales drone, would ever call that thing a mainframe, which are dedicated to transaction and business data processing, not FLOPS.

  122. They die when the caps blow by tepples · · Score: 1

    An individual PC will eventually fail physically. A cap might blow, a chip might blow, etc. Once 8-core monsters are all they make, it won't be any cheaper to buy a PC that runs existing PC software and is comparable to a Core 2 Duo.

  123. When the person controls the computing by tepples · · Score: 1

    I define "PC" to mean that the person who owns a device controls what computing is done on it. If a device's owner needs permission from some other organization to run a given piece of software, it's not a PC. Kindle Fire and anything with Galaxy or Nexus or both in the name are PCs. Apple devices whose name starts with iP are not. PlayStation 3 was until system software 3.21.

  124. THANK THE GODS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nice w/ the HP, Dell & other big box shit-box PC declining... the home "enthusiast" PC builders can finally get some breathing room & build machines that will not deliver a crappy experience for end users. *cough Dell

    All the newbs can buy an overpriced MAC or grab a Chromebook..
    The rest of us that have real work or play will build our custom rigs & let the sheep flounder!

    nothing to see here...

  125. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by Gr8Apes · · Score: 1

    You're correct, pasted the wrong spec:
    1080 x 1920 pixels, 5.0 inches
    That's for the Samsung Galaxy S4. Much better, with my magnifying glass.

    --
    The cesspool just got a check and balance.
  126. It isnt year 2000 anymore by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There is no longer a rush to purchase a new PC every 6 months as now PC performance has stabilized since 13 years ago.

    Ever since we hit the 1 ghz barrier, the useful lifespan of the average PC, pending hardware failure has jumped from several months to several years.

    A laptop from 2006 is still just as useful as one made in 2013. May be slower (though core2duo based systems still hold their own) but it can still go online, run windows 7, and do basic things like email and casual web browsing, which is what the majority of people do. I have customers with old P4 systems from 2002 that are now just considering upgrading.

    To put some perspective on this: a system from 1992 would have been next to completely useless in 2003. Let alone in 1995. A system that is 10-11 years old now can still function and be useful to someone.

    This is the real reason the PC industry is on a slow decline. It's slowly levelling off where it should be rather than where investors want it to be. It isnt dying, it's stabilizing from an initial high saturation of sales.

    People buy tablets and smart phones, but those arent the only things they use. They still use a PC at home, as a backup.

    The only reason the PC is "dying" is because market players want it dead so people can be trapped on their locked down, limited devices, allowing people to only use their online services. PCs allow you to use any service you want and generally give you more freedom. Which people who make money generally hate.

    Businesses in the end will be the main buyer of PCs and computer systems. Especially in the upcoming years as the economy rebounds.

  127. Still not buying it by saleenS281 · · Score: 1

    I still don't believe "pc's are dying" - the problem is PC's got "fast enough" several years ago. There's no killer new feature that requires gobs more horsepower. My pushing 5 year old desktop can still play the latest games at max resolution on my 24" monitor without slowing down. Why on earth would I fork over several grand to upgrade it when it gets the job done? Until the hardware starts failing I won't be replacing parts anytime soon. *THAT* is why pc sales are slumping IMO. I don't know anyone who owns *JUST* a tablet and nothing else. They'd never get a thing done.

  128. then make them better by Mirar · · Score: 1

    I remember a few years ago -- from about 1990 to 2005 - the PC would be significantly faster, about twice as fast, twice the size of RAM, twice the size of HDD every two years.

    Every four years you had to have a new PC, if you were doing any serious work on the PC. (For instance gaming... ;) )

    The last years I haven't really seen that, other than the graphics cards.

    I look at laptops and they still come with 2GB RAM, just as they did four years ago. The normal graphics isn't any better than four years ago either, because they focus on making it energy efficient, not fast. The HDD is getting slightly, but not very much larger.

    There's no need for me to upgrade if there's no need for me to upgrade.

    Windows 8 certainly doesn't feel like an upgrade, either.

    IPS screens in high res feels like an upgrade, but it's mainly Asus that managed to make something out of that, and those "zenbooks" have their own flora of problems...

    Make me something I want to buy, and I'll buy. Stop waiting for *APPLE* to make something, then copy that and wondering why noone buys your stuff!

    (Also, what's up with keyboards? PCs use to have a lovely line of PgUp/Home/etc to the right, but when apple removed it, it vanished on PCs as well! The key keeps walking away to the right. The enter key can't make up it's mind. Whut?)

    1. Re:then make them better by RandomStr · · Score: 1

      I agree about the high res displays, it's the only thing I'd purchase right now, if there were any products available...

      Asus's 30 is a step is the right direction, but I want a(3) quality 4k 24inch lcd at the right price... ...and by that I mean cheaper than a 14inch laptop with a 4k screen.

      And I'll buy a new pc when the haswell e5 xeon chips(with DDR4) are out, until then there's no point for me.

    2. Re:then make them better by Mirar · · Score: 1

      I'm kind of focused on laptops these years, but I agree - I can't even buy a 17" 1920x1080 that doesn't sit in a laptop... it's all focusing on the mass market.

      I miss the 80s. You could get all kinds of weird stuff for your obsolete, obscure home computer. Today, I'm lucky if I can order anything slightly specialized... or even spare parts.

    3. Re:then make them better by RandomStr · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I suppose it's the price of computers being mass market consumer devices.

      At least they are significantly cheaper these days(laptops), but I do also feel that they all cater to consumers that don't know what's good(i.e. average screen rez is lower these days than 5 years ago)... It's all about churn not innovation.

      If you haven't seen the new Fujitsu Lifebook UH90 4k laptops(also HP and one other I think), I suggest you Google it. They are very impressive.

  129. Seven advantages of PlayStation 4 over PCs by tepples · · Score: 1
    Hairy, meet Crono. I know console fans have some points, and I know PC fans have some points, and I just want to make sure I have the complete picture.

    Thanks to the blessing that is HDMI its beyond butt simple to plug a PC into a TV

    But you'll need the right case in order to get a spouse to agree.

    and you'll be rocking your games in glorious 1080P in no time, with your choice of controller. Hell with Steam having Big Picture mode

    Does Steam support buying in Big Picture mode? And a few weeks ago, I tried going to Big Picture mode on Steam on my aunt's PC running Windows 8 (with Classic Shell) and either Steam crashed or the video driver crashed.

    if they want to game i can take something like this quad core

    PlayStation 4 has eight cores. Eight is greater than four.

    and just have me slap it into one of the mini cases

    For one thing, you don't serve my area. For another, a PlayStation 4 allows one to walk in and walk out 15 minutes later with a console.

    So if they want to sell more PCs and laptops frankly they need to be putting out some ads showing folks just how easy it is

    Someone in another thread claims that any gaming PC under $500 will lack most or all of these:

    • An 8-core CPU. It's a Jaguar; do the ma+h.
    • 8 GB of unified memory at least as fast as GDDR5.
    • Ease of use: downloadable games for the platform can be installed through a one-step, controller-operated game installer, as opposed to clicking through EULA, what components to install and where, etc. I'm told GOG installers are traditional mouse-driven Windows installers.
    • Ease of use: not having to troubleshoot Windows administration problems or Wine incompatibilities.
    • A wide selection of AAA games in genres historically under-represented on PCs, including "3D platformers, singing games (and music games in general), light gun games, kart racers," and Eastern-style role-playing games.
    • A consumer electronics-style case as a standard feature.
    • Availability in a brick-and-mortar store in under an hour.

    What answer should I give?

    1. Re:Seven advantages of PlayStation 4 over PCs by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      Sigh, let old Hairy enlighten you because you be buying some BULLSHIT friend.

      First of all the Jag is NOT an Octocore, not unless you consider a P4 with HT to be a dual core because that is ALL the Jag is, its a quad with hardware HT baked in. Also its NOT a gaming chip, look up "AMD Bobcat" and you'll see its a NETBOOK chip design primarily for streaming media NOT gaming. I have an E350 Bobcat in my netbook and its nice, but even a first gen Athlon64 X2 will curbstomp it. Both MSFT and Sony are looking at all that netflix money and the Jag (Aka Bobcat 3.0) sucks a lot less power than a full chip...but its also a LOT weaker. Look up the Bobcat benches, you'll see that graphics wise its better than Intel but CPU wise a 1.1GHz Celeron dual will beat it.

      Second dude? You be talking to somebody who makes his living doing this and its NOT the case that gets Wifey poo on board, its the controller. I have YET to see a woman do anything but smile like you just gave her a box of chocolates when i slap one of these babies in her hand...why? Because most women can text their asses off and that remote fits their smaller hands sooooo good. You slap that bad boy in her hand and pop up her FB and watch how quickly she is ignoring your ass to play her match 3 games. Then when you show her how easy it is to rip all those kid's movies so no more little Billy crying that his Barney got scratched and won't play, and even let her rip her movies and have them all sorted by rating,even password protected if she wants? Cha ching! Dude seriously, easy fucking sale,REAL easy sale.

      Third if BPM crashed? 5 will get you 10 it was NOT the fault of BPM but of Win 8, which is why i don't give my customers that POS. do you have ANY idea how many times I've been paid to do the "refresh my PC" bit until folks get fed up and have me install Win 7? Too damned many times. I am thoroughly convinced there is a serious corruption bug in win 8 and that refresh was put in there because they couldn't fix the bullshit before Ballmer shit it out. Now this is just a guess, not gonna fiddle with that hunk of feces long enough to do an in depth troubleshooting on it but if I had to guess its all that mobile and tweeting twits for shits that is causing the problems as I have noticed those that let me toss metro for something like Start 8 seem to have less issues, still not as stable as Win 7 which knock on wood has been the most solid OS I've ever seen. Try start 8 with the Auntie and see if that helps but you may have to get her Win 7 for best results.

      Finally what answer should you give? Do you want to be gangfucked without lube? Buy the console. If you want to 1.- Have total control over your hardware, 2.- Have insanely low prices thanks to competition, 3.- have the choice to have as little or as much DRM as you please, 4.- have a system that will outlast ANY console when it comes to useful life, like how my 7 year old former gaming PC is now my GF's surfing and music box?5.- Want to have MP that lasts more than a few months? Then buy the PC, it'll pay for itself in less than a year with all the money you save.

      Just look at the humble bundles, steam has constant sales such as L4D 2 right now is a whole $5, and that isn't even counting the literally thousands of FTP games. I have been selling HTPCs left and right and NOT ONE has wanted to go back to console, NOT ONE. The games are cheaper, the systems can do more (no shitty 500GB HDD that you can't change without paying out the ass thanks to DRM, you can pick up a couple of TB for less than $85 if you watch the sales) so you can have it play games AND be a Music Jukebox AND a Video tank AND even an office box if the one in the den is tied up AND an entertainment center...the options are frankly unlimited man, its just a better deal all around. hell want a controller? You can use anything from an Atari 260

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    2. Re:Seven advantages of PlayStation 4 over PCs by tepples · · Score: 1

      Then when you show her how easy it is to rip all those kid's movies

      I thought ripping DVDs was copy protection circumvention. In my country, advertising a PC for use with copy protection circumvention tools could get a PC builder in legal trouble.

      do you have ANY idea how many times I've been paid to do the "refresh my PC" bit until folks get fed up and have me install Win 7?

      He'd probably tell me that console gamers don't have to worry about bringing the device into a dealer to downgrade it to work around bugs. Because all hardware is the same, all hardware can easily make use of the same workarounds that the console maker pushes out to the public. Ease of use.

      not gonna fiddle with that hunk of feces

      To a novice consumer, Windows 8 isn't the hunk of feces; the computer it came on is the hunk of feces. Windows 8 gives PCs a bad name.

      I have noticed those that let me toss metro for something like Start 8 seem to have less issues [...] Try start 8 with the Auntie

      Perhaps it's more that people who are that comfortable with the Windows 7 layout are more likely to know their way around the Windows way of doing things. Or have you seen a stability difference between Classic Shell, which she currently uses, and Stardock Start8?

      If you want to 1.- Have total control over your hardware

      Most novice consumers don't want control; they want stability and ease of use.

      2.- Have insanely low prices thanks to competition

      What's the low price for a PC with 8 GB of unified GDDR5 memory? Is it under 399 U.S. dollars, the asking price for a PlayStation 4 this fall? GDDR5.

      3.- have the choice to have as little or as much DRM as you please

      I imagine that most novice consumers aren't aware of abstract concepts like "DRM". You're going to have to explain exactly how the DRM on actual PS3 games gets in the way of the median user, as I imagine that PS4 will use a similar model to PS3 (except for requiring PlayStation Plus for multiplayer).

      4.- have a system that will outlast ANY console when it comes to useful life

      The NES came out in 1985. It played NES games then, and it plays NES games now. I still play Bionic Commando. I still play Rockin' Kats. I even play Balloon Fight on occasion. How's that for useful life?

      Likewise, 99 percent of PlayStation game discs work on a PlayStation 2, PlayStation 3, or PlayStation 4 console, except for a few like X-Files where TPR must have been smoking something that day. What's the best way to get Windows 3.1 and Windows 95/98 games to work on a modern Windows 7/8 PC? Windows 3.1 executables don't run at all on a 64-bit Windows operating systems, and a lot of Windows 9x games rely on behaviors of the 9x kernel and libraries that NT 6.x doesn't replicate. If you keep your old PC around to play old-PC games, you can't very well slap all your old parts on Craigslist.

      5.- Want to have MP that lasts more than a few months? Then buy the PC

      Want to have MP without having cheaters ruin your experience? Then buy the console. Equal footing. Besides, he tells me that multiplayer servers being shut off after a few months was a PlayStation 2 problem.

      steam has constant sales

      My source claims that the PlayStation Store has sales as well, especially to PlayStation Plus subscribers.

      I have been selling HTPCs left and right and NOT ONE has wanted to go back to console, NOT ONE.

      So how do you talk them out of liking their previous console's first-party or otherwise exclusive franchises?

      so you can have it play games AND be a Music Jukebox AND a Video tank

      "PlayStation 3: It only does everything." I believe this is part of the "

    3. Re:Seven advantages of PlayStation 4 over PCs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That anyone who cares about those things is a faggot?

    4. Re:Seven advantages of PlayStation 4 over PCs by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      The SCOTUS has ruled that format shifting falls under fair use, i simply can't do the ripping FOR you but you are free to do it yourself and there are plenty of free and low cost rippers to choose from.

      And not having to pay a dealer for downgrades? what would you call yellow and red rings o' death then? Or how many had to hunt for the older PS3s if they wanted backwards compatibility which isn't a problem on the PC? I can fire up an emulator and in seconds be playing the very first game I EVER owned, Pong, or play the latest and greatest and everything in between. hell if you don't want to mess with DOSBox for the really old stuff GOG has them prebuilt with DOSBox for a little of nothing, nothing like firing up Blood, the first FPS I ever got, and being able to play it on my hexacore along with Redneck rampage and the rest of my early shooter years. with the consoles you are SOL, you either keep a shitload of old hardware or you don't play.

      as far as Classic Shell its fine, my customers seem to like the look and feel of Start8 a little better but its a preference really. But the Metro crap doesn't seem to be very stable and I'm convinced its all that cellphone "tweeting twits for shits" craps constantly updating that is a BIG cause of the problems with win 8 as i have a couple of customers that stripped all that shit out so metro is just an oversized cpl and it seems to run stable without all the updating background trash. But with win 7 and Win 8 being the same price its really a moot point, why buy something shitty when you can have something good? If they sell win 8.1 for a dirt cheap price for 6 months like they did Win 8 I'll probably pick up a handful of licenses and use Start8 to make into an ersatz Win 8 but if its the same price as 7 no contest. And no i don't think its because of what they are "used' to, i have run alternate shells for years yet even i found myself bashing my head on the desk because of metro, its a real step backwards when it comes to UIs...except for HTPCs, then its a perfect 10 foot UI, again just kill the tweeting twits crap.

      and dude quit waving your ePeen in my face, nobody gives a rat's ass about GDDR 5, okay? NOBODY. and the head of one of the major gaming houses (sorry have a migraine and my Google goes shitty when my head hurts) says it isn't gonna make a damned bit of difference, a triple A game costs a min of 40 mil right now so they will ALL be cross platform except for a small handful made by the console owners. since its all cross platform guess what? that GDDR 5 means exact jack and shit because its gonna have to run equally well on all systems, lowest common denominator. BTW I can easily slap another 8GB of RAM into my system AND as much as 6GB of GDDR 5 if I want to go crossfire, can you? I can also quadruple my HDD space, add SSDs if I want, even RAM based cache to make my games truly fly, what do you have besides GDDR 5? Squat, that's what, its even got a subpar 500Gb HDD instead of a 1TB which frankly ought to be standard.

      As for how DRM gets in the way, did you not pay attention to the xbone? Or that Sony has a similar mechanism that devs can opt in for? How about what happens to those PSHome games when the arch switches? I really don't see Sony giving out coupons to get those games for free with the PS4 since the PS3 version won't run. with X86 I can fire up a game from 1984 and play just fine, hell some of them even have fan made patches (verbotten on consoles) that not only allow the MP to still work but extend the game to insane levels! Check out freelancer sometime, still has new systems being added a decade after its release and still has a large MP community to play with/against if you so choose.

      and throwing another flag, bullshit on the field. I play a fricking TON of MP games, and I can honestly say i have NEVER run into a cheater. Ran into some sore losers, and you see those on ANY game, but those hosting games are quick to ban the shit out of anybody cheating but quick and if you prefer there is always punkbuster. In fact if

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    5. Re:Seven advantages of PlayStation 4 over PCs by tepples · · Score: 1
      First, let me reiterate: As a hobbyist game developer, I'm not the console fan, unless by console you mean OUYA. I'm presenting fan arguments to you because I'm trying to work with you to figure out the most effective way to convince PS4 fans that HTPCs are suitable for more than a tiny niche of geeks. Both console fans like him and HTPC fans like us have misconceptions, and I'm trying to correct them. Thank you for working with me so far.

      The SCOTUS has ruled that format shifting falls under fair use

      Fair use is a defense only to copyright infringement. One can commit circumvention without infringing the copyright itself. Universal v. Reimerdes. I will confess to a crime right here: I have used VLC to rip CSS'd DVDs for private use and for inclusion of short clips in criticisms.

      Or how many had to hunt for the older PS3s if they wanted backwards compatibility which isn't a problem on the PC?

      Is Windows 7/8's compatibility with Windows 95 games better than the PS1 emulator in the PS3 and PS4?

      I can fire up an emulator and in seconds be playing the very first game I EVER owned, Pong

      When you build a PC for someone who owns a copy of Pong for Atari 2600, how do you recommend that he copy his Atari 2600 cartridges into the PC?

      But with win 7 and Win 8 being the same price its really a moot point

      You can't install Windows 7 OEM on a PC that you plan to use yourself; you have to get your PC builder to install it for you. This "Personal Use License" is another new feature in Windows 8.

      nobody gives a rat's ass about GDDR 5, okay? NOBODY.

      Thank you. For each "nobody builds an HTPC" I can cite your "nobody cares about GDDR5 as main system memory".

      I can also quadruple my HDD space, add SSDs if I want

      Also true of PS3 and PS4. Even the maligned Xbox One will support external HDDs and SSDs that connect through SuperSpeed USB.

      As for how DRM gets in the way, did you not pay attention to the xbone? Or that Sony has a similar mechanism that devs can opt in for?

      I thought that soon after Microsoft announced this originally planned antifeature of Xbox One, Sony announced that it would not implement this mechanism for disc games.

      and WTF are you talking about raiding parts for?

      To afford to build a console-competitive HTPC for the price of a console. Too may people see the sticker price of the system and don't want to pay 21.9% interest to borrow the money to have a local PC builder build a brand new HTPC.

    6. Re:Seven advantages of PlayStation 4 over PCs by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      Dude if you really want to give people a convincing argument? Just send 'em a link to the humble bundles and the Steam sales page, problem solved. Hell they got Borderlands II with ALL the DLC for a grand total of...drumroll...$20. I don't think I've had to spend more than $20 since switching and nearly all my games are triple A titles, I have so many games now that I still have a dozen i haven't even got to fire up yet, with all the free mods i still haven't got to enjoy all the free content for the ones I'm already playing and there is only so many hours in the day.

      As far as ripping goes? Nobody cares dude, they really don't. Heck I had a state trooper bring in his wife last year so i could give her a couple of lessons on ripping because their daughters love Dora and the littlest one keeps managing to get the discs scratched, so now they have a nice ULV Athlon quad in the living room with 4TB worth of drives and the wifey poo takes all their new kid's movies and after ripping slaps 'em in the closet where the kids can't get at it. as long as all they are doing is format shifting their own stuff and not running P2P nobody cares, in fact i don't think I've heard of a single case of somebody getting busted for format shifting or backing up their own stuff. And with todays rippers its "stick in disc, push button" simple so converting your content to digital has never been easier. Hell you see that video on Bill Gates house? he has all his movies loaded on a server in his basement and just streams then around the house and that thing was broadcast around the world, nobody said shit.

      as far as BC goes i have found MAYBE 4 games out of my collection that don't work, and they were just VERY badly coded, as an example i76 was coded to use the PC clockspeed as a timer for in game events so that even with MoSlo it simply doesn't play those events because it can't understand a modern clock but other than a couple like that? Plays great. Blood, redneck Rampage, No One Lives Forever, they all run great. and of course thanks to emulation i can also run PS1,PS2, SNES,Genesis, NES, Atari jaguar, pretty much all of the great classic consoles work and more and more of the classic console games are being brought to the PC, you can buy pretty much the entire Sega back catalog on steam now.

      Uhhh..I AM the builder friend, so i can install it no problem. while some may argue its a grey area I've talked to MSFT tech support and if they don't have a problem with it, WGA don't have a problem with it, and MSFT took the money? I don't see a problem here. all the systems have the holo-stickers on the sides, the only ones that don't are the units I built for the family which duh! Used the family pack back when i could pick it up for $100. why they only include one sticker but 3 installs is beyond me but whatever, I've had to re-auth when i changed the board and it passes WGA so who cares? all the systems in the shop are built for sale so no worries there, and if you wanted to be a stickler for the license have somebody else push the button and you give them a dollar, tada! They are a system installer now.

      And you must have missed the memo put out by Sony before E3, sorry I can't Google it right now but I'm making supper but the way they worded it was "WE at Sony will never use this feature, the use of this feature is purely up to the publishers and we at Sony support the new features that will come from..."blah blah blah, you get the idea. You already know EA is gonna jump on this shit, why do you think they just up and dropped ALL of the online pass bullshit they were making people do? because they know they can tell Sony they want the switch flipped and the hardware will do that FOR them, no need for those assholes to even run an auth server, let the hardware do it. Mark my words within 6 months of release you'll see activision,EA, and ubisoft ALL using this bullshitl, the former CEO of EA even said games should be $80-$100, no way they are gonna let the ability to kill used games and borrowing slip away like

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
  130. Software development as a hobby by tepples · · Score: 1

    However PC's would probably be more like Workstations reserved for more computer intensive work such as Software Development

    I code in Python on my netbook. If a tablet with a keyboard can't do this, and devices capable of software development become no longer affordable to the general public, then on what machine should high school kids be exposed to programming?

    1. Re:Software development as a hobby by jellomizer · · Score: 1

      You can get Python as an iOS download.

      --
      If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
    2. Re:Software development as a hobby by tepples · · Score: 1

      Does Python for iOS have anything like Pygame or even Tkinter? I don't currently own an iPad, so I can't try it for myself.

  131. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by ZFox · · Score: 1

    Hello, I do and in fact I prefer it over the device-specific options that I have. From the couch, I prefer a full-fledged PC streaming to a 50" monitor and maybe to a laptop on the coffee table if I am playing a game on the other (I'd like to point out that instead of PIP that would be picture-out-of-picture, or POOP).

    The killer feature for me is alt-tabbing or resizing my way back into a full computer experience--all without interrupting playback (I'm usually doing something else while watching tv or netflix, so my priorities might be different).

  132. The reality is... by blahplusplus · · Score: 1

    ... CPU performance has stalled. Software tools and programmers are still decades away from re-learning how to code in parallel. Lastly many programs cannot be parallelized.

    CPU's have hit a brick wall in terms of clock speed/power. Until the next breakthrough in materials science that allows clockspeed/heat to not be an issue again performance will remain mediocre.

  133. Am I the "out", or am I the "liar"? by tepples · · Score: 1

    Facts:
    1. More people use computing devices than ever before
    2. More people carry around their computing devices than ever before

    Facts 1 and 2 are consistent with my use of a 10" laptop to code on hobby projects while riding the bus to and from work. Programming is one thing that tablets have historically been bad at, especially Apple tablets. Once this 10" laptop finally dies, I worry about what I'll use next.

    3. Many (most?) people use computing devices to consume media being it music, movies, or web pages (posted). The one outlier is text messaging and Facebook posts which both seem to be quite conducive to most common computing platforms

    So am I the "out", or am I the "liar"?

  134. Programmable GPU by tepples · · Score: 1

    The next big thing is H.265-- and I'm guessing there will be a few years of people complaining about battery life and high cpu-load until video chipsets incorporate dedicated circuitry.

    Since 2007, the programmable GPU has become commonplace. Watch some smart guy implement some of the processing passes of VP9 and H.265 as shaders.

  135. Personal computing vs. "mother may I" computing by tepples · · Score: 1

    If you attach an external keyboard to a tablet it becomes a laptop with a touch input as a mouse. Thats a PC to me.

    I agree, so long as the person who owns a device gets to control what computing is done on it. An Android or Windows 8 tablet is a personal computer; iPad and Surface RT, not so much. If you have to ask the OS publisher "mother may I" before installing anything, it's not really your personal computer.

  136. We all work for Dice by tepples · · Score: 1

    Not necessarily. h4rr4r just happens to be an intelligent Slashdot user. Still, in a way, every logged-in user who writes intelligent comments that get moderated up to Score:5 works for Dice, as do the randomly selected moderators who perform this filtering.

    1. Re:We all work for Dice by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      Infinity imaginary mod points to you sir.

      I don't see to get to moderate very often, likely because I do not meta moderate very much.

  137. Only a niche want to "solve original problems" by tepples · · Score: 1

    My definition is more along the lines of "a device that provides data-processing tools to help the user solve original problems."

    I agree with you. But the claim of the post-PC crowd is that outside of businesses, people who want to "solve original problems" form a tiny, commercially insignificant niche.

  138. Where the person controls the computing by tepples · · Score: 1

    The rule of thumb is that a PC is a machine that can run the x86 build of DOS and/or Windows natively.

    Consider a device that allows the person who owns it to control what computing is done on it without having to ask the operating system publisher "mother may I". Do you have a clear, concise term for such a device?

  139. Unlike your 24" monitor, a TV has... by tepples · · Score: 1

    I have a 46" TV. I have no cable.

    You can still use it with an antenna to receive over-the-air signals. And unlike your 24" monitor, a TV probably came with 1. composite inputs, 2. YPbPr analog component inputs, and 3. an audio output. Composite and YPbPr component inputs are useful for legacy SDTV picture sources, such as VHS decks and any video game console older than Xbox 360 S, PlayStation 3, or Wii U. An audio output is helpful because HDMI devices transmit audio in the blanking intervals of the video instead of sending it on a separate cable.

    So basically the same function, yet one would be called a TV, the other a computer.

    They're sold in different sections of the electronics store because the big manufacturers that make mass-market consumer products don't feel like confusing the user. If a monitor has no speakers but is used as a TV, a manufacturer would have to deal with expensive support calls asking why the user can't plug in his Nintendo and can't hear what the people on TV are saying.

  140. Good enough for most people by travbrad · · Score: 1

    I'm sure a lot of the reason PC sales have slowed is simply because there is no "killer app" for mainstream consumers that requires beefier hardware. For example, my parents are using an 8-year-old CPU (Athlon X2 4200+), and it would be very hard to justify upgrading for what they do. Unless you have a specific use in mind (like gaming or video editing/encoding), PCs have been "fast enough" for awhile.

    In my experience most new PC purchases now are because of hardware failures or people borking their OS with malware/McAfee, and rather than risking $200 in the Geeksquad lottery of incompetence they just get a new PC.

  141. Re:No software exists to justify buying new hardwa by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I disagree, the fact that the new consoles are using PC architecture it will be easier to beef up graphics etc on PC versions

  142. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

    Go see an eye doctor.
    Also go check out tablets, some come in up to 30" size.

  143. Video card and battery for an old laptop by tepples · · Score: 1

    But sometimes, a machine is a laptop. SSD will help here, but it's a lot harder to find a new video card that fits an old laptop than to find one that fits an old desktop. And in a few cases I've seen, the real problem is that the battery no longer holds a substantial charge, and a replacement lithium ion battery pack is so expensive that one might as well buy a new laptop.

  144. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by Gr8Apes · · Score: 1

    Whoosh

    It's a 5 inch screen - what are you using to work on that 1 or 2 pixel flaw?

    --
    The cesspool just got a check and balance.
  145. Go away? No, become commercially insignificant by tepples · · Score: 1

    The PC will never die - someone somewhere needs to code the applications for the tablets

    And if you have such a hot idea for a tablet application, you can afford the $2,000 that workstation makers will charge once the economies of scale of home and office PCs evaporate.

    and then there are the PC gamers, who will never go away

    Even if they don't go away, they can still become commercially insignificant. NES gamers haven't gone away, and there are still new NES games for sale, but I'd bet they're a drop in the bucket compared to even OUYA.

  146. Learn to code or you're dead in the job market by tepples · · Score: 1

    The only teenagers that buy PCs these days are the geeks

    The opinion has been growing that everybody ought to take at least an introductory programming class in high school. This would probably involve buying some sort of home PC on which to do homework.

  147. Not available on mobile by tepples · · Score: 1

    People can do their "consumption" media (browsing, videos, etc) on tablets or phones. Don't need a PC for that.

    The content owner has not made this comment available on mobile
    Add to playlist to watch it later on a PC

    There are plenty of things that won't play on a device running iOS or Android. This includes games on Newgrounds or Kongregate, YouTube videos with certain kinds of music, the entirety of Hulu Free, anything uploaded to Vimeo by a user who doesn't subscribe to Vimeo Plus, and Pandora past a few hours a month.

  148. Does Start screen support Xbox 360 Controller? by tepples · · Score: 1

    WTF? Why do I want a tablet interface on my 24" monitor?

    Because ideally, it can be navigated without a mouse or keyboard at all. Consider someone who has plugged a couple Xbox 360 Controllers into his PC's front USB ports because he's about to play a PC game with a friend. I haven't tried it yet, but seeing as how the Windows 8 Start screen looks just like the third Xbox 360 Dashboard introduced in the fourth quarter of 2011, I'd be surprised if one couldn't use an Xbox 360 Controller to navigate the Start screen.

  149. ZAGGkeys by tepples · · Score: 1

    My ZAGGkeys FLEX keyboard works fine with my Nexus 7 tablet. I've used it to post to Slashdot (make sure to turn off "mobile version") and forums.nesdev.com, for example. Or if you have an Android device and a USB OTG cable, you can use any existing USB keyboard.

  150. There exist multiple data types and multiple apps by tepples · · Score: 1

    Why do you need a file manager if you are not administrating files?

    A flat object store might have been fine in the click-wheel iPod days, when the device ran only the single audio player application that came preloaded. But on a "smart" device, there exist data types other than music, and some of these data types can be used by more than one application. The iOS model, as I understand it, is that a piece of data is "in" an application. That doesn't help if multiple applications are able to work on a particular piece of data stored on your device. For example, one may have both iWork and QuickOffice installed on a given device and want to share documents between the two. Or one may have both a word processor and Safari an HTML form with an <input type="file"> control can attach any stream of bytes that has a name and a MIME type to a form submission, but in iOS 1-5 it did nothing, and in iOS 6 it was limited to pictures and videos. Sometimes one may want to attach a document created in a word processing application, a spreadsheet created in a spreadsheet application, etc.

  151. DJGPP on 486 by tepples · · Score: 1

    I haven't actually used a 386, but I've developed games on a hand-me-down 80486SX computer with 8 MB of RAM and a 340 MB hard drive. In 1999, that was enough to run DJGPP (GCC for MS-DOS) and RHIDE (Turbo C++ clone IDE for DJGPP).

  152. Re:There exist multiple data types and multiple ap by UnknowingFool · · Score: 1

    So you are using a device for purposes for which it was not intended and then you are complaining that it doesn't work the way you want it to work?

    --
    Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
  153. When work is at home by tepples · · Score: 1

    How about this: "People use PCs when they're on the job. When they get home, they use tablets."

    So what do people use when they work from home? What do students use for homework?

  154. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by tepples · · Score: 1

    Devices needed for media production are just less in demand.

    But what this means is that people have less upward mobility. Before, somebody getting started in media production could use the media viewing device he already owned. Now, if all he has is a locked-down tablet, he has to go save up $500 for a PC, and that might be a bit much for a high school student.

  155. Which appliance for indie games? by tepples · · Score: 1

    There's no such thing as Netflix or Steam, those are just myths.

    Both of those are already more effectively delivered to the average consumer through some sort of speciality appliance. Game consoles have been the primary focus of the likes of EA for a long time now.

    The major consoles are good for major label games. But through which specialty appliance should the sort of indie games greenlit on Steam be delivered?

  156. That iOS isn't intended for this is the problem by tepples · · Score: 1

    The use I envision for a computing device involves sharing data objects between applications. I believe a tool should do one thing and do it well, and a task should use whatever tools, plural, are best for the job. The fact that iOS is not intended for this sort of use is the problem, and it's why I've seen no reason for me to own an iPad. The problem comes when someone already owns an iPad and his needs outgrow the intention of iOS.

  157. Real digitizer vs. capacitive digitizer by tepples · · Score: 1

    I'd agree with you for something like a Galaxy Note or Galaxy Tab that includes a real Wacom digitizer with a real pen. But the capacitive digitizer in most phones and tablets is much less precise with a comparatively large uncertainty caused by the irregular shape of the finger's contact surface, and I don't see how it beats even a mouse.

  158. The PC is daddy's by tepples · · Score: 1

    Consider a household where the kids can use the tablet as much as he wants, but the PC is daddy's, and either the kids aren't allowed on it or even if they are, it's for only a half hour at a time. So if one of the kids gets an idea to learn to program, how will he fulfill it?

    1. Re:The PC is daddy's by RaceProUK · · Score: 1

      Raspberry Pi.

      --
      No colour or religion ever stopped the bullet from a gun
  159. Galaxy does what iDon't: built-in Wacom by tepples · · Score: 1

    Then your iPad is inferior to a Galaxy Note or Galaxy Tab that includes a built-in Wacom digitizer.

  160. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by rivercityrandom · · Score: 1

    My 386 back in the day booted to an OS (albeit MS-DOS) in about ten seconds, had an excellent (IBM Model M) input device, and ran numerous productivity and games software pretty quickly and seldom ever crashed. And the only virus it got, I think, was that stupid prank that turned your screen upside down. I think I wouldn't mind an ARM tablet with similar qualifications :)

  161. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 1

    ran numerous productivity and games software pretty quickly and seldom ever crashed.

    provided you could tweak your config.sys and autoexec.bat to free up the necessary memory.

    My first (IBM Compatible) PC was a DOS compatibility card that came with the family's PowerMac 6100-- the mac was faster, but the PC had games. Before that, we had an Apple IIe/IIgs and a Mac IIsi.

    But the ipad 2, running an ARM, is approximately as fast as a cray 2--a supercomputer contemporaneous with the 80386.

    Kids these days! They should get off my lawn and visit a computer history museum...

  162. Re:This is the slope before the cliff by jmcvetta · · Score: 1

    Typing at 70+wpm on a real keyboard, beats using a screen keypad anyday.

    Valid point - but one that only matters to users who can type reasonably fast. Many (most?) can't.

  163. I can tell you why by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I work for a company that has an interesting policy of setting aside a $1,000 "PC bonus" for each employee to use within the calendar year on upgrades to their home PC. The intent being to make sure that everyone has a PC they can use to work from home with, should the need arise.

    Usually I have more than enough things I want to spend it on. But this year? I'm still sitting on it, and I have no idea what I'm going to buy with it.

    Processor? My 3930K is still at the top-end of the range after two years, unless I wanted to spend $2,000+ on a Xeon.

    Video card? I bought a 680 last year. The 780 isn't much faster, and AMD has yet to make another move.

    RAM? The 32GB I have is still more than enough, just as it was when I bought it. The price has actually gone up since then anyway.

    Storage? We're finally starting to see some terabyte SSD drives, but the 512GB model from last year is still basically current.

    OS? I wouldn't touch Windows 8 with a 10-foot pole.

    Basically, the PC industry is killing itself by not moving forward anymore. They are not giving the people who are used to upgrading regularly a reason to do so. The next time I make a major upgrade is probably to an 8-core Haswell-E at the end of 2014. If I were just a gamer, and didn't do any work on the machine, I wouldn't really have a compelling reason to upgrade even then. The Sandy Bridge 4-cores from 3 years ago are more than adequate, and even the graphics card upgrades have dropped off of late.