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To: Captain Jack who wrote (81489)4/24/2000 9:11:00 AM
From: Senator949  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 97611
 
What's the problem at Microsoft?

Robin



To: Captain Jack who wrote (81489)4/24/2000 9:19:00 AM
From: Night Writer  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 97611
 
Internet, Asia Propel 1stQ PC Sales

SAN FRANCISCO, Apr 24, 2000 (AP Online via COMTEX) -- Consumer demand coupled
with Asia's economic rebound led to a double-digit growth in sales of personal
computers in the first three months of the year.

Research groups Dataquest Inc. and International Data Corp., in reports released
today, estimated that PC manufacturers shipped 30 million machines in the period
ending March 31.

San Jose, Calif.-based Dataquest, a unit of Gartner Group, said worldwide sales
grew 15 percent from the comparable 1999 period, while Framingham, Mass.-based
IDC calculated slightly higher percentage gains, pegging the year-to-year
increase at 20 percent.

Of those totals, Dataquest said 11.1 million PCs were sold in the United States,
a 14.5 percent from last year. IDC recorded U.S. sales of 11.6 million PCs, a 17
percent improvement.

Consumers eager for access to the Internet helped offset a corporate spending
lull on PCs during the quarter, the firms said.

Bruce Stephen, an analyst with IDC, attributed the sluggish business market to a
``Y2K hangover' caused by efforts to protect corporate computer systems from
potential problems caused by the rollover from 1999 to 2000.

As Asia's economy continued its recovery from a deep recession, the region's
consumers and businesses bought PCs at a robust clip. Sales in the Asia-Pacific
market rose by 36 percent in the first quarter and Japan shipments climbed by 35
percent, IDC said.

Even though the PC industry remains on a roll, Dataquest analyst Charles
Smulders warned that a sales slowdown looms if manufacturers don't develop a new
generation of more powerful, stylish machines that persuade businesses and
consumers to replace their existing systems.

``The market is getting pretty saturated,' Smulders said. ``About 60 percent of
households have a PC now. The industry faces the challenge of finding a way to
persuade existing users to replace their PCs every two to three years instead of
every four to five years.'

For now, manufacturers are having trouble getting the necessary parts to keep
pace with current demand. The two biggest chip makers, Intel Corp. and Advanced
Micro Devices, both said they were caught off guard by the first-quarter demand.
Intel, in particular, had trouble producing an adequate supply of
microprocessors.

In the race for PC market share, Dell Computer and Compaq Computer continued
their neck-and-neck duel. Dell leads the U.S. market with a roughly 17 percent
market share with Compaq running at 16 percent, according to both Dataquest and
IDC. Compaq remains the worldwide PC sales leader, with a 13 percent to 10
percent market share lead on Dell, the groups said.

Hewlett-Packard Co. and eMachines made the biggest strides in sales during the
quarter, the reports showed. Boosted by the popularity of its Pavilion series,
H-P now holds down the No. 3 spot after a first-quarter U.S. sales increase that
ranged between 67 and 74 percent. Meanwhile, eMachines and its low-priced PCs
broke into the No. 5 spot in the United States as sales shot up by at least 79
percent.

IBM Corp.'s decision to stop selling PCs through retailers dropped the company
from the top five in U.S. market share. Dataquest estimated that IBM's U.S.
shipments plunged by 42 percent, contributing to a 16 percent decline in the
global market.

Copyright 2000 Associated Press, All rights reserved.