A
laptop is a
personal computer designed for
mobile use and small and light enough to
sit on a person's
lap while in use. A laptop
integrates most of the
typical
components of a
desktop
computer, including a
display,
a
keyboard, a pointing device (a
touchpad, also known as a trackpad, and/or
a
pointing stick), speakers, and
often including a battery, into a single small and light unit. The
rechargeable battery (if
present) is charged from an
AC
adapter and typically stores enough energy to run the laptop
for two to three hours in its initial state, depending on the
configuration and power management of the computer.
Laptops are usually shaped like a large
notebook with thicknesses between and dimensions
ranging from 10x8 inches (27x22cm, 13" display) to 15x11 inches
(39x28cm, 17" display) and up. Modern laptops weigh ; older laptops
were usually heavier. Most laptops are designed in the
flip form factor to protect the screen and the
keyboard when closed. Modern
tablet
laptops have a complex joint between the keyboard housing and
the display, permitting the display panel to swivel and then lie
flat on the keyboard housing. They usually have a touchscreen
display and some include handwriting recognition or graphics
drawing capability.
Laptops were originally considered to be "a small niche market" and
were thought suitable mostly for "specialized field applications"
such as "the military, the Internal Revenue Service, accountants
and sales representatives". But today, there are already more
laptops than desktops in businesses, and laptops are becoming
obligatory for student use and more popular for general use. In
2008 more laptops than desktops were sold in the US and it has been
predicted that the same milestone will be reached in the worldwide
market as soon as late 2009 .
History
the personal computer became feasible in the early 1970s, the idea
of a portable personal computer followed.
A "personal, portable
information manipulator" was imagined by Alan
Kay at Xerox
PARC
in 1968 and described in his 1972 paper as the
"Dynabook".
The IBM SCAMP project (Special Computer APL Machine Portable), was
demonstrated in 1973. This prototype was based on the PALM
processor (Put All Logic In Microcode).
The
IBM 5100, the first commercially
available portable computer, appeared in September 1975, and was
based on the SCAMP prototype.
As 8-bit CPU machines became widely accepted, the number of
portables increased rapidly. The
Osborne
1, released in 1981, used the Zilog Z80 and weighed . It had no
battery, a 5"
CRT screen and dual
5¼" single-density floppy drives. In the same year the first
laptop-sized portable computer, the
Epson
HX-20, was announced. The Epson had a
LCD screen, a rechargeable battery
and a calculator-size printer in a chassis. Both
Tandy/RadioShack and
HP also produced portable computers of
varying designs during this period.
The first laptop using the
flip form
factor appeared in 1982.
The $8150
GRiD Compass 1100 was used at NASA
and by the
military among others. The
Gavilan
SC, released in 1983, was the first notebook marketed using the
term "laptop". From 1983 onwards, several new input techniques were
developed and included in laptops, including the
touchpad (
Gavilan SC,
1983), the
pointing stick (IBM
ThinkPad 700, 1992) and handwriting recognition
(Linus Write-Top, 1987). Some CPUs were designed specifically for
low power use including laptops (Intel
i386SL, 1990), and were supported by dynamic
power management features (Intel
SpeedStep
and AMD
PowerNow!) in some designs.
Displays reached VGA resolution by 1988 (Compaq SLT/286) and
256-color screens by 1993 (
PowerBook 165c), progressing quickly to
millions of colors and high resolutions. High-capacity hard drives
and optical storage (
CD-ROM followed by CD-R
and CD-RW and eventually by DVD-ROM and the writable varieties)
became available in laptops soon after their introduction to the
desktops.
Classification
The general terms "laptop" or "notebook" can be used to refer to a
number of classes of small portable computers:
By purpose and (approximately) by screen
size:
- Desktop replacement
– emphasizes performance, is less portable, 15" and larger
screen;
- Standard laptop – balances portability and
features, 13-15" screen;
- Subnotebook – emphasizes
portability, has fewer features, 12" or smaller screen.
|
By features:
- Budget – a cheap, lower-performance
standard-sized laptop;
- Tablet PC – Has a touch-screen
interface, may or may not have a keyboard;
- Netbook – A budget subnotebook suited
to Internet surfing and basic office applications. Usually has a 9"
or 10" screen.
- Gaming laptop - A
larger laptop with a powerful graphics
card for playing graphics-intensive computer games.
- Rugged – Engineered to
operate in tough conditions (strong vibrations, extreme
temperatures, wet and dusty environments).
|
Desktop replacement
A desktop replacement computer is a laptop that provides most of
the capabilities of a
desktop
computer, with a similar level of performance. Desktop
replacements are usually larger and heavier than standard laptops.
They contain more powerful components and have a 15" or larger
display. Because of their bulk, they are not as portable as other
laptops and their operation time on batteries is typically shorter;
instead, they are meant to be used as a more compact, easier to
carry alternative to a desktop computer.
Some laptops in this class use a limited range of desktop
components to provide better performance for the same price at the
expense of battery life; in a few of those models, there is no
battery at all and the laptop can only be used when plugged in.
These are sometimes called
desknotes, a
portmanteau of the words "desktop" and
"notebook," though the term can also be applied to desktop
replacement computers in general.
In the early 2000s, desktops were more powerful, easier to upgrade,
and much cheaper in comparison with laptops. But in the last few
years, the advantages have drastically changed or shrunk since the
performance of laptops has markedly increased. In the second half
of 2008, laptops have finally outsold desktops for the first time
ever. In the U.S., the PC shipment declined 10 percent in the
fourth quarter of 2008. In Asia, the worst PC shipment growth went
up 1.8 percent over the same quarter the previous year since PC
statistics research started.
The names "
Media Center Laptops" and
"
Gaming Laptops" are also used to describe
specialized members of this class of notebooks.
Subnotebook
A subnotebook, also called an
ultraportable by some
vendors, is a laptop designed and marketed with an emphasis on
portability (small size, low weight and longer battery life) that
retains the performance of a standard notebook. Subnotebooks are
usually smaller and lighter than standard laptops, weighing between
0.8 and 2 kg (2 to 5 pounds); the battery life can exceed 10
hours when a large battery or an additional battery pack is
installed.
To achieve the size and weight reductions, ultraportables use high
resolution 13" and smaller screens (down to 6.4"), have relatively
few
ports, employ expensive
components designed for minimal size and best power efficiency, and
utilize advanced materials and construction methods. Some
subnotebooks achieve a further portability improvement by omitting
an optical/removable media drive; in this case they may be paired
with a
docking station that contains
the drive and optionally more ports or an additional battery.
The term "subnotebook" is usually reserved to laptops that run
general-purpose desktop operating systems such as
Windows,
Linux or
Mac OS X, rather than specialized software
such as
Windows CE,
Palm OS or
Internet
Tablet OS.
Netbook
Netbooks are laptops that
are light-weight, economical, energy-efficient and especially
suited for wireless communication and
Internet access. Hence the name
netbook
(as "the deviceexcels in web-based computing performance") rather
than
notebook which
pertains to size.
Especially suited for
web browsing
and
e-mailing, netbooks "rely heavily on
the Internet forremote access to
web-based applications". and are targeted
increasingly at
cloud computing
users who rely on servers and require a less powerful
client computer. While the devices range
in size from below 5 inches to over 12, most are between 7 and 11
inches and weigh between 2 and 3 pounds.
Netbooks normally use light-weight operating systems including
Linux and
Windows XP
rather than more resource-intensive operating systems like
Windows Vista, as they have less processing
power than traditional laptops.
Recently,
Google has announced to be
developing an own operating system called
Chrome for this market.
Rugged laptop
A rugged (or ruggedized) laptop is designed to reliably operate in
harsh usage conditions such as strong vibrations, extreme
temperatures, and wet or dusty environments. Rugged laptops are
usually designed from scratch, rather than adapted from regular
consumer laptop models. Rugged notebooks are bulkier, heavier, and
much more expensive than regular laptops, and thus are seldom seen
in regular consumer use.
The design features found in rugged laptops include rubber sheeting
under the keyboard keys, sealed port and connector covers, passive
cooling, superbright displays easily readable in daylight, cases
and frames made of magnesium alloys that are much stronger than
plastic found in commercial laptops, and solid-state storage
devices or hard disc drives that are shock mounted to withstand
constant vibrations. Rugged laptops are commonly used by public
safety services (police, fire and medical emergency), military,
utilities, field service technicians, construction, mining and oil
drilling personnel. Rugged laptops are usually sold to
organizations, rather than individuals, and are rarely marketed via
retail channels.
Components
The basic components of laptops are similar in function to their
desktop counterparts, but are
miniaturized, adapted to mobile use, and
designed for low power consumption. Because of the additional
requirements, laptop components are usually of inferior performance
compared to similarly priced desktop parts. Furthermore, the design
bounds on power, size, and cooling of laptops limit the maximum
performance of laptop parts compared to that of desktop
components.
The following list summarizes the differences and distinguishing
features of laptop components in comparison to desktop personal
computer parts:
- Motherboard – Laptop motherboards
are highly make and model specific, and do not conform to a desktop
form factor.
Unlike a desktop board that usually has several slots for expansion cards (3 to 7 are common), a board
for a small, highly integrated laptop may have no expansion slots
at all, with all the functionality implemented on the motherboard
itself; the only expansion possible in this case is via an external
port such as USB. Other boards may have one or
more standard, such as ExpressCard, or
proprietary expansion slots. Several other functions (storage
controllers, networking, sound card and external ports) are
implemented on the motherboard.
- Central processing unit
(CPU) – Laptop CPUs have advanced power-saving features and produce
less heat than desktop processors, but are not as powerful.
There is a
wide range of CPUs designed for
laptops available from Intel
(Pentium M, Celeron M,
Intel Core and Core
2 Duo), AMD
(Athlon, Turion 64, and Sempron),
VIA Technologies, Transmeta and others. On the non-x86 architectures, Motorola and IBM produced the chips
for the former PowerPC-based Apple laptops
(iBook and PowerBook). Some laptops have removable CPUs,
although support by the motherboard may be restricted to the
specific models. In other laptops the CPU is soldered on the
motherboard and is non-replaceable.

- Memory – SO-DIMM memory modules that are usually found in
laptops are about half the size of desktop DIMMs. They may be accessible from the bottom of the
laptop for ease of upgrading, or placed in locations not intended
for user replacement such as between the keyboard and the
motherboard. Currently, most midrange laptops are factory equipped
with 3-4 GB of DDR2 RAM, while some
higher end notebooks feature up to 8 GB of DDR3
memory. Netbooks however, are commonly equipped with only 1 GB of
RAM to keep manufacturing costs low.
- Expansion cards – A PC Card (formerly PCMCIA) or
ExpressCard bay for expansion cards is
often present on laptops to allow adding and removing
functionality, even when the laptop is powered on. Some subsystems
(such as Ethernet, Wi-Fi, or a cellular
modem) can be implemented as replaceable internal expansion
cards, usually accessible under an access cover on the bottom of
the laptop. Two popular standards for such cards are MiniPCI and its successor, the PCI Express Mini.
- Power supply – Laptops are
typically powered by an internal rechargeable battery that is charged
using an external power supply. The power supply can charge the
battery and power the laptop simultaneously; when the battery is
fully charged, the laptop continues to run on AC power. The charger
adds about 400 grams (1 lb) to the overall "transport
weight" of the notebook.
- Battery – Current laptops
utilize lithium ion batteries, with more
recent models using the new lithium
polymer technology. These two technologies have largely
replaced the older nickel
metal-hydride batteries. Typical battery life for standard
laptops is two to five hours of light-duty use, but may drop to as
little as one hour when doing power-intensive tasks. A battery's
performance gradually decreases with time, leading to an eventual
replacement in one to three years, depending on the charging and
discharging pattern. This large-capacity main battery should not be
confused with the much smaller battery nearly all computers use to
run the real-time clock and to store
the BIOS configuration in the CMOS memory when the computer is off. Lithium-ion
batteries do not have a memory effect as older batteries may have.
The memory effect happens when one does not use a battery to its
fullest extent, then recharges the battery. New innovations in
laptops and batteries have seen new possible matchings which can
provide up to a full 24 hours of continued operation, assuming
average power consumption levels. An example of this is the HP
EliteBook 6930p when used with its ultra-capacity battery.
- Video display controller – On
standard laptops the video controller is usually integrated into
the chipset. This tends to limit the use of
laptops for gaming and entertainment, two fields which have
constantly escalating hardware demands. Higher-end laptops and
desktop replacements in particular often come with dedicated
graphics processors on the motherboard or as an internal expansion
card. These mobile graphics processors are comparable in
performance to mainstream desktop graphic accelerator boards.
- Display – Most modern laptops
feature or larger color active matrix displays
based on a CCFL lamp with resolutions of 1280x800 (16:10) or 1366 x 768 (16:9) pixels
and above. Many current models use screens with higher resolution
than typical for desktop PCs (for example, the 1440×900 resolution
of a 15". Newer laptops come with LED based screens offering a
lesser power consumption and wider viewing angles. Macbook Pro can be found on 19" widescreen
desktop monitors.
- Removable media drives – A
DVD/CD reader/writer drive is
typically standard. CD drives are becoming rare,
while Blu-Ray is becoming more common on
notebooks. Many ultraportables and netbooks either move the
removable media drive into the docking station or exclude it
altogether.
- Internal storage – Laptop hard disks are physically smaller— or —compared to
desktop drives. Some newer laptops (usually ultraportables) employ
more expensive, but faster, lighter and power-efficient flash memory-based SSDs instead. Currently, 250 to 500 GB
sizes are common for laptop hard disks (64 to 256 GB for
SSDs).
- Input – A pointing
stick, touchpad or both are used to
control the position of the cursor on the screen, and an integrated
keyboard is used for typing. An external keyboard and/or mouse may
be connected using USB or PS/2 (if present).
Docking stations
A
docking station is a relatively
bulky laptop accessory that contains multiple ports, expansion
slots, and bays for fixed or removable drives. A laptop connects
and disconnects easily to a docking station, typically through a
single large proprietary connector. A
port replicator is a
simplified docking station that only provides connections from the
laptop to input/output ports. Both docking stations and port
replicators are intended to be used at a permanent working place (a
desk) to offer instant connection to multiple input/output devices
and to extend a laptop's capabilities.
Docking stations became a common laptop accessory in the early
1990s. The most common use was in a corporate computing environment
where the company had standardized on a common network card and
this same card was placed into the docking station. These stations
were very large and quite expensive. As the need for additional
storage and expansion slots became less critical because of the
high integration inside the laptop, port replicators have gained
popularity, being a cheaper, often passive device that often simply
mates to the connectors on the back of the notebook, or connects
via a standardised port such as
USB or
FireWire.
Standards
Some laptop components (optical drives, hard drives, memory and
internal expansion cards) are relatively
standardized, and it is possible to upgrade or
replace them in many laptops as long as the new part is of the same
type. Depending on the manufacturer and model, a laptop may range
from having several standard, easily customizable and upgradeable
parts to a proprietary design that cannot be reconfigured at
all.
In general, components other than the four categories listed above
are not intended to be replaceable, and thus rarely follow a
standard. In particular, motherboards, locations of ports, and
design and placement of internal components are usually make and
model specific. Those parts are neither interchangeable with parts
from other manufacturers nor upgradeable. If broken or damaged,
they must be substituted with an exact replacement part. Those
users uneducated in the relevant fields are those the most affected
by incompatibilities, especially if they attempt to connect their
laptops with incompatible hardware or power adapters.
Intel
, Asus, Compal, Quanta
and other laptop manufacturers have created the Common Building Block standard for
laptop parts to address some of the inefficiencies caused by the
lack of standards.
Advantages
Portability is usually the first feature mentioned
in any comparison of laptops versus desktop PCs. Portability means
that a laptop can be used in many places—not only at home and at
the office, but also during commuting and flights, in coffee shops,
in lecture halls and libraries, at clients' location or at a
meeting room, etc. The portability feature offers several distinct
advantages:
- Getting more done – Using a laptop in places
where a desktop PC can't be used, and at times that would otherwise
be wasted. For example, an office worker managing his e-mails
during an hour-long commute by train, or a student doing his/her
homework at the university coffee shop during a break between
lectures.
- Immediacy – Carrying a laptop means having
instant access to various information, personal and work files.
Immediacy allows better collaboration between coworkers or
students, as a laptop can be flipped open to present a problem or a
solution anytime, anywhere.
- Up-to-date information – If a person has more
than one desktop PC, a problem of synchronization arises: changes
made on one computer are not automatically propagated to the
others. There are ways to resolve this problem, including physical
transfer of updated files (using a USB stick or CDs) or using
synchronization software over the Internet. However, using a single
laptop at both locations avoids the problem entirely, as the files
exist in a single location and are always up-to-date.
- Connectivity – A proliferation of Wi-Fi wireless networks and cellular broadband data
services (HSDPA, EVDO and
others) combined with a near-ubiquitous support by laptops means
that a laptop can have easy Internet and local network connectivity
while remaining mobile. Wi-Fi networks and laptop programs are
especially widespread at university campuses.
Other advantages of laptops include:
- Size – Laptops are smaller than standard PCs.
This is beneficial when space is at a premium, for example in small
apartments and student dorms. When not in use, a laptop can be
closed and put away.
- Ease of Access - Most laptops have doors on
the underside that allow the user to access the memory, hard drive
and other components, by simply flipping the laptop to access the
doors. For desktops the user must usually access the backside of
the computer, which is harder if it's in an area with little
space.
- Low power consumption – Laptops are several
times more power-efficient than desktops. A typical laptop uses
20-90 W, compared to 100-800 W for desktops. This could be
particularly beneficial for businesses (which run hundreds of
personal computers, multiplying the potential savings) and homes
where there is a computer running 24/7 (such as a home media
server, print server, etc.)
- Quiet – Laptops are often quieter than
desktops, due both to the components (quieter, slower 2.5-inch hard
drives) and to less heat production leading to use of fewer and
slower cooling fans.
- Battery – a charged laptop can run several
hours in case of a power outage and is not affected by short power
interruptions and brownouts. A desktop PC needs a UPS to handle short
interruptions, brownouts and spikes; achieving on-battery time of
more than 20–30 minutes for a desktop PC requires a large and
expensive UPS.
- All-in-One - designed to be portable, laptops
have everything integrated in to the chassis. For desktops
(excluding all-in-ones) this is divided into the desktop, keyboard,
mouse, display, and optional peripherals such as speakers, and a
webcam. This leads to lots of wiring. It can also lead to massive
power consumption.
- Extras - in comparison to low-end desktops,
even low-end laptops include features such as a Wi-Fi card, and
Express Card slot, and a memory card reader.
Disadvantages
Compared to desktop PCs, laptops have disadvantages in the
following fields:
Performance
While the performance of mainstream desktops and laptops is
comparable, laptops are significantly more expensive than desktop
PCs at the same or even lower performance level.The upper limits of
performance of laptops are a little bit lower, and "bleeding-edge"
features usually appear first in desktops and only then, as the
underlying technology matures, are adapted to laptops.
However, for Internet browsing and typical office applications,
where the computer spends the majority of its time waiting for the
next user input, even netbook-class laptops are generally fast
enough.Most higher-end laptops are sufficiently powerful for
high-resolution movie playback, 3D gaming and video editing and
encoding. However, laptops are disadvantaged when dealing with
database, math, engineering, financial software, etc.
Some manufacturers work around this performance problem by using
desktop CPUs for laptops.
Upgradeability
Upgradeability of laptops is very limited compared to desktops,
which are thoroughly standardized. In general, hard drives and
memory can be upgraded easily. Optical drives and internal
expansion cards may be upgraded if they follow an industry
standard, but all other internal components, including the CPU,
motherboard and graphics, are not intended to be upgradeable.
The reasons for limited upgradeability are both technical and
economic. There is no industry-wide standard
form factor for laptops; each major laptop
manufacturer pursues its own
proprietary
design and construction, with the result that laptops are difficult
to upgrade and have high repair costs. With few exceptions, laptop
components can rarely be swapped between laptops of competing
manufacturers, or even between laptops from the different
product-lines of the same manufacturer.
Some upgrades can be performed by adding external devices, either
USB or in expansion card format such a
PC Card: sound cards, network adapters, hard and
optical drives, and numerous other peripherals are available, but
these upgrades usually impair the laptop's portability, because
they add cables and boxes to the setup and often have to be
disconnected and reconnected when the laptop is moved.
Ergonomics and health
Because of their small and flat keyboard and trackpad pointing
devices, prolonged use of laptops can cause
repetitive strain injury.Usage of
separate, external
ergonomic
keyboards and pointing devices is recommended to prevent injury
when working for long periods of time; they can be connected to a
laptop easily by USB or via a docking station. Some health
standards require ergonomic keyboards at workplaces.
The integrated screen often causes users to hunch over for a better
view, which can cause neck or spinal injuries. A larger and
higher-quality external screen can be connected to almost any
laptop to alleviate that and to provide additional "screen estate"
for more productive work.
A study by
State University
of New York researchers found that heat generated from laptops
can raise the temperature of the
scrotum
when balancing the computer on one's lap, potentially putting
sperm count at risk. The study, which
included roughly two dozen men aged 21 to 35, found that the
sitting position required to balance a laptop can raise
scrotum temperature by as much as 2.1 °C (3.78 °F).
Heat from the laptop itself can raise the
temperature by another 0.7 °C (1.26 °F), bringing the potential
total increase to 2.8 °C (5.04 °F). However, further research is
needed to determine whether this directly affects
sterility in men.
A common practical solution to this problem is to place the laptop
on a table or desk. Another solution is to obtain a cooling unit
for the laptop, these units are usually USB powered consist of a
hard thin plastic case housing 1, 2 or 3 cooling fans (the whole
thing is designed to sit under a laptop) which results in the
laptop remaining cool to the touch, and greatly reduces laptop heat
buildup. There are several companies which make these
coolers.
Heat from using a laptop on the lap can also cause skin
discoloration on the thighs.
Durability
Due to their portability, laptops are subject to more wear and
physical damage than desktops. Components such as screen hinges,
latches,
power jack and
power cords deteriorate gradually due to ordinary
use. A liquid spill onto the keyboard, a rather minor mishap with a
desktop system, can damage the internals of a laptop and result in
a costly repair. One study found that a laptop is 3 times more
likely to break during the first year of use than a desktop.
Original external components are expensive (a replacement AC
adapter, for example, could cost $75); other parts are
inexpensive—a power jack can cost a few dollars—but their
replacement may require extensive disassembly and reassembly of the
laptop by a technician. Other inexpensive but fragile parts often
cannot be purchased separate from larger more expensive components.
The repair costs of a failed motherboard or LCD panel may exceed
the value of a used laptop.
Laptops rely on extremely compact cooling systems involving a
fan and
heat
sink that can fail due to eventual clogging by accumulated
airborne dust and debris. Most laptops do not have any sort of
removable dust collection filter over the air intake for these
cooling systems, resulting in a system that gradually runs hotter
and louder as the years pass. Eventually the laptop starts to
overheat even at idle load levels. This dust is usually stuck
inside where casual cleaning and vacuuming cannot remove it.
Instead, a complete disassembly is needed to clean the
laptop.
Battery life of laptops is limited; the capacity drops with time,
necessitating an eventual replacement after a few years. The
battery is often easily replaceable, and one may replace it on
purpose with a higher end model to achieve better battery
life.
Security
Being valuable, common and portable, laptops are prized targets for
theft. The cost of the stolen business
or personal data and of the resulting problems (
identity theft,
credit card fraud, breach of
privacy laws) can be many times the value of the
stolen laptop itself. Therefore, both physical protection of
laptops and the safeguarding of data contained on them are of the
highest importance.
Most laptops have a
Kensington
security slot which is used to tether the computer to a desk or
other immovable object with a security cable and lock. In addition
to this, modern operating systems and
third-party software offer
disk encryption functionality that renders
the data on the laptop's
hard drive
unreadable without a
key or a
passphrase.
Some laptops also now have additional security elements added by
the consumer, including eye recognition software and fingerprint
scanning components.
Major brands and manufacturers
summary="Links to Wikipedia articles about laptop manufacturers. For some of them, articles about the company's most well-known models or series are linked as well."
There is a multitude of laptop brands and manufacturers; several
major brands, offering notebooks in various classes, are listed in
the box to the right.
The major brands usually offer good service and support, including
well-executed documentation and driver downloads that will remain
available for many years after a particular laptop model is no
longer produced. Capitalizing on service, support and brand image,
laptops from major brands are more expensive than laptops by
smaller brands and ODMs.
Some brands are specializing in a particular class of laptops, such
as gaming laptops (
Alienware), netbooks
(
EeePC) and laptops for children (
OLPC).
Many brands, including the major ones, do not design and do not
manufacture their laptops. Instead, a small number of Original
Design Manufacturers (ODMs) design new models of laptops, and the
brands choose the models to be included in their lineup.
In 2006, 7
major ODMs manufactured 7 of every 10 laptops in the world, with
the largest one (Quanta
Computer
) having 30%
world market share. Therefore, there often are identical
models available both from a major label and from a low-profile ODM
in-house brand.
Sales
Battery-powered portable computers had just 2% worldwide market
share in 1986. But today, laptops are becoming increasingly
popular, both for business and personal use. In
2008 it is estimated that 145.9 million notebooks were
sold, and in
2009 the number will grow to 177.7
million. The third quarter of 2008 was the first time when notebook
PC shipments exceeded
desktops,
with 38.6 million units versus 38.5 million units.
For
Microsoft Windows systems, the
average selling price (ASP) showed a decline in 2008/2009, possibly
due to low-cost
netbooks, drawing $689 at
U.S. retail in August 2008. In 2009, ASP had further fallen to $602
by January and to $560 in February. While Windows machines fell
$129 in these seven months,
Mac laptop ASP
declined just $12 from $1524 to $1512.
Since 2006, the world's top selling Laptop brand is
HP, which now has 21.2% marketshare.
[28984]
See also
References
- What is a laptop computer
- What is a Subnotebook?
- The Net Impact of Netbooks? It Depends on Who Uses
Them for What
- What is a laptop computer?
- UMID Netbook Only 4.8″
- WORLD FIRST review of Inspiron Mini 12: Dell’s
super-slim netbook!
- For an example, on a CPU-intensive task (video encoding), the
fastest-performing mobile CPU as of early 2008 (Intel Core 2
Extreme X7800, 2.6 GHz) performed about 30% worse than the
slowest-performing desktop CPU (AMD Sempron 64 3000+, at 1.6 GHz)
in the surveyed selection.
- The socketed CPUs are perhaps for the manufacturer's
convenience, rather than the end-user, as some manufacturers try
new CPUs in last year's laptop models with an eye toward selling
upgrades rather than new laptops.
- Almost all laptops contain a Wi-Fi interface; broadband
cellular devices are available widely as extension cards and USB
devices, and also as internal cards in select models.
- A sample line of UPS devices and on-battery power:
- In a comparison between laptop and desktop of equal cost, the
desktop's System Benchmark Score was twice that of the laptop.
- For example, a review of the MSI Wind Netbook says that "The
device is rarely sluggish in general use. It renders Web pages
quickly, launches most applications without becoming too bogged
down and generally doesn't feel like it's a budget
laptop."
-
http://www.engadget.com/2009/07/14/rock-delivers-bd-core-i7-equipped-xtreme-790-and-xtreme-840-ga/
- For example, the video display cable and the backlight power
cable that pass through the lid hinges to connect the motherboard
to the screen will eventually break from repeated opening and
closing of the lid. These tiny cables usually cannot be purchased
separate from the entire LCD panel, with the price of hundreds of
dollars.
- {{cite web | title = Identical Laptops, Different Prices: Don't
Be Fooled by Branding | publisher = Info-Tech Research Group | date
= 2006-10-10 | url =
http://www.infotech.com/Research/Notes/ITA/IdenticalLaptopsDifferentPricesDontBeFooledbyBranding.aspx?PublicationNumber={DF4272EE-FB5F-4F0A-9A06-192B1CFE2DB8}&SubCenter={0487C9B2-1A2D-42D2-829D-3A34B8BE02F8}
| accessdate = 2008-11-27 }}
- Analysis: Did Intel underestimate netbook
success?, Accessed at 10 January 2009
- Notebook PC Shipments Exceed Desktops for First
Time in Q3, isuppli.com, accessed at 13 January 2009
- Netbooks Are Destroying the Laptop Market and
Microsoft Needs to Act Now
://www.pioneer-electronics.co.uk/