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PC Shipments In 2013 See the Worst Yearly Decline In History

An anonymous reader writes "The PC market continues to be in free fall, having now seen its seventh consecutive quarter of declining worldwide shipments. Worldwide PC shipments dropped to 82.6 million units in the fourth quarter of 2013, according to Gartner, a 6.9 percent decrease from the same period last year. It's worth emphasizing that this past quarter resulted in a total of 315.9 million units shipped in 2013, a 10 percent decline from 2012, and the worst decline in PC market history. The overall shipment level was equal to the one in 2009."

10 of 564 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Current PCs are good enough. by 0123456 · · Score: 5, Informative

    And then some people just don't like Win 8.

    You've actually met someone who does like Window 8?

    Everyone I know who's seen it takes one look, goes 'WTF?' and decides not to buy a new PC after all.

  2. Build your own by Sandman1971 · · Score: 4, Informative

    Now I'm only going by my circle of friends, family and acquaintances so this might be a small anomaly but...

    It appears that not only is tablet use displacing having a 2nd or 3rd PC, it is more importantly replacing the laptop (name brand). When buying a desktop, the people in my circle have been moving away from buying the Dells and Compaqs and other name brands and have either been building their owns or buying the local PC shop pre-mades, Numbers that wouldn't show up in these reports.

      As others have mentioned, today's desktop PCs also tend to last longer as they are still very powerful 3-4 years later.

    Mix all of these together and it's no surprise

    --
    It's better to burn out than to fade away
  3. Re:Theories? by nctritech · · Score: 4, Informative

    I got it. I used it for a few months because I support "normal people" and had to learn it. I moved to Windows 7 and never put that scourge back on the laptop ever again. Windows 8 definitely contributed to driving down PC hardware sales.

  4. Re:Current PCs are good enough. by Peristaltic · · Score: 5, Informative

    It's Microsoft's fault. They won't allow the makers to sell you a PC without a tablet OS.

    I'm sure that's a significant factor. I wonder how the makers feel about that.

    Look no further "Samsung is blaming Windows 8 for its poor performance in the PC market and the overall decline of the industry as a whole."

  5. Re:Custom Builds by Billly+Gates · · Score: 5, Informative

    Custom built PCs are a niche market. I highly doubt they would have anything near a 10% impact on the entire PC market.

    Not anymore. Asus mentioned they have sold millions of high end/gaming motherboards as gamers no longer buy Dells and replace the GPU like they did in the old days.

    You can thank crappy PSU's and proprietary tiny cases for this decline as gamers are the only ones who upgrade besides corporations and they only do so every 10 years now when MS decides it needs more money for another OS upgrade.

  6. Re:Current PCs are good enough. by 0123456 · · Score: 4, Informative

    So, with console getting a major upgrade recently, do you expect to see a huge "move" in games in about 2 years?

    That 'major upgrade' makes the console about as fast as a low to mid-range gaming PC today.

  7. Re:Current PCs are good enough. by jedidiah · · Score: 4, Informative

    > Also, if kept reasonably clean, a Mac will last way longer than the typical OEM box/laptop.

    No it won't. It will become obsolete faster as it's completely unmaintainable. Anything that breaks will be harder to deal with. Obsolete components can't be swapped out.

    With a PC, I can do this myself or pay someone else. This isn't an option with a Mac.

    My old Mac is a doorstop. Can't even get OS updates for it. Similarly old PCs are fine, especially with an upgraded video card.

    --
    A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  8. Re:Current PCs are good enough. by jedidiah · · Score: 4, Informative

    > But for $500, I want to be able to type up a document in a pinch. Plug in my USB devices. Connect to HMDI TV, plug in an SD Card, open a command prompt,

    I can do all of that with my phone. I can certainly do that with an Android tablet without spending $500 on it.

    --
    A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  9. Re:Custom Builds by neuro88 · · Score: 4, Informative

    Not anymore. Asus mentioned they have sold millions of high end/gaming motherboards as gamers no longer buy Dells and replace the GPU like they did in the old days.

    You can thank crappy PSU's and proprietary tiny cases for this decline as gamers are the only ones who upgrade besides corporations and they only do so every 10 years now when MS decides it needs more money for another OS upgrade.

    I was about to ask you to back up that claim, but a quick google shows what you're saying as true: http://www.maximumpc.com/gigabyte_asus_wrestle_motherboard_shipment_crown2013

    The article is a bit dated, but apparently Asus was expecting to ship 22.2 million mid to high end boards in 2013. It's starting to seem custom rigs (particularly for gaming) is hardly a niche. Maybe the market's somewhat smaller than desktop machines, but it's certainly large enough to be considered healthy and is still growing.

  10. Windows PCs just not necessary for home use anymor by technomom · · Score: 4, Informative

    We have a couple of aging Windows laptops in our house but they are slowly getting replaced by Chromebooks and tablets. There's just nothing that we run on Windows that absolutely 100% demands Windows. We're using Mint instead of Quicken now, that was the last Windows thing we used. On the Chromebooks, the kids use Google Docs or Microsoft's own cloud based Office when it is absolutely called for. They have yet to hand in an assignment this year where the teacher could tell what source program was used.

    The Windows laptops are used mostly for browsing and there's one that my husband keeps around because his work VPN is on it, but he hasn't used it in so long, he's not entirely sure the password is up to date. We also have one Macbook that gets a little usage.

    Even so, it's much more likely that if we ever buy an actual full on computer, it would more likely be a Macbook Air rather than a Windows PC. Just never warmed up to the Metro look at all. I tried it and it looked ugly and busy to me whereas the Mac look is still familiar and simple.