Affiliate Disclosure
If you buy through our links, we may get a commission. Read our ethics policy.

Asus aiming for tablet sales to eclipse netbooks in 2012

Asus announced that it expects tablet shipments, which will reach 1.8 million units this year, to grow significantly next year, possibly even eclipsing the PC maker's shipments of netbooks in 2012.

Taiwan-based Asus revealed its current year projections and 2012 sales targets at a global sales meeting on Monday, DigiTimes reports. The company said it will ship 14.7 million notebooks, 4.8 million netbooks and 1.8 million tablet PCs this year.

In 2012, the PC maker believes its tablet shipments will grow to at least three million units, with an internal goal of six million units, thereby surpassing rival Samsung. Asus has been able to generate some hype around its Android-based Eee Pad Transformer Prime tablet, a quad-core upgrade to its Transformer tablet, but it's too early to tell whether sales of the device will take off.

Asus revealed three separate tablet lines in January in a broad effort to compete with Apple's iPad. However, the non-Apple tablet market has failed to gain much traction this year. According to the NPD Group, Asus came in third place among Apple's competitors with a 10 percent share of non-iPad sales in the U.S., which reached just 1.2 million total units in the first 10 months of the year.


Asus' Eee Pad Transformer Prime tablet is the first to feature the Tegra 3.

The Google Android tablet market is expected to be shaken up by newcomer Amazon. Analysts believe the online retailer's Kindle Fire will take second place behind Apple with shipments of 3.9 million units in the December quarter. Evercore Partners analyst Robert Cihra believes the Fire will make up half of all Android-based tablets in 2012.

Asus could face a serious threat from the low-cost Kindle Fire, according to the analyst. "Amazon’s success may just vaporize other ‘for profit’ Android tablet OEM roadmaps," Cihra said.

As for notebooks, Asus expects growth in traditional notebook shipments next year, but is predicting continued decline for the netbook category as sales of its Eee PC line wane. The company expects notebook shipments to jump from 14.7 million unit this year to 19.3-19.8 million in 2012. Based on Asus' stated shipment goals, 2012 netbook sales would range from 2.2-2.7 million units, though its higher internal targets suggest possible netbook sales of as much as 4.5.

Asus has also focused its attention on Intel's new Ultrabook category in recent months. The chipmaker introduced the design specification in May with Asus as a partner. "At ASUS, we are very much aligned with Intel's vision of Ultrabook," chairman Johnny Shih said at the time.

ASUS UX21 Ultrabook

However, vendors may be having second thoughts about their commitments to the Ultrabook effort. Both Asus and Acer were said to have reduced orders by as much as 40 percent because of slow sales of the thin-and-light laptops. Ultrabook makers are reportedly waiting on a $100 marketing subsidy from Intel that will help drive prices below the $1000 mark early next year.

Asus' move away from netbooks and toward tablet PCs and Ultrabooks contrasts rival netbook maker Acer's strategy. Acer vice president Scott Lin voiced the company's continued commitment to the netbook market last week, noting that it will focus its efforts on selling netbooks in emerging markets. The vendor is estimated to be the No. 1 seller of netbooks with 1.7 million units in the third quarter. Asus reportedly sold 1.2 million netbooks worldwide in the third quarter.

29 Comments

solipsismx 14 Years · 19562 comments

The Asus Transformer Prime is a great piece of HW. The only thing it's really lacking right now is that it's still on Honeycomb, but it will be getting ICS in the near future.

hittrj01 17 Years · 753 comments

Quote:
Originally Posted by SolipsismX

The Asus Transformer Prime is a great piece of HW. The only thing it's really lacking right now is that it's still on Honeycomb, but it will be getting ICS in the near future.

Yeah, much like the second round of Android phones, spearheaded by the original Droid, started to show the potential of Android in general, the second round of Android tablets, spearheaded by the Transformer Prime, will really start to show what Android tablets are capable of. I love my iPhone and iPad, but the geek in me can't believe what the Transformer Prime is capable of.

solipsismx 14 Years · 19562 comments

Quote:
Originally Posted by hittrj01

Yeah, much like the second round of Android phones, spearheaded by the original Droid, started to show the potential of Android in general, the second round of Android tablets, spearheaded by the Transformer Prime, will really start to show what Android tablets are capable of. I love my iPhone and iPad, but the geek in me can't believe what the Transformer Prime is capable of.

I can see Apple bringing out a thin keyboard, perhaps even one with an extended battery, that allows for the iPad 3 to slide into a collapsable* dock. THe one think that is missing is the need for a landscape docking port but that wouldn't be too hard to add.* Collapsable as the current keyboard dock makes traveling with it very difficult.

mac.world 15 Years · 340 comments

Quote:
Originally Posted by SolipsismX

The Asus Transformer Prime is a great piece of HW. The only thing it's really lacking right now is that it's still on Honeycomb, but it will be getting ICS in the near future.

We'll see if hardware specs sell Android. So far, that has not been the case. I doubt this will be the exception since Amazon is taking the low ball crowd and the iPad takes the high end, there ain't much room left for anything else.

solipsismx 14 Years · 19562 comments

Quote:
Originally Posted by Mac.World

We'll see if hardware specs sell Android. So far, that has not been the case. I doubt this will be the exception since Amazon is taking the low ball crowd and the iPad takes the high end, there ain't much room left for anything else.

HW specs alone aren't much, but Asus has done things Apple does to make their HW specs add to the user experience. For instance they use a great IPS panel and they have the best battery life for an Android-based tablet. The battery is still under the iPad but it's pretty close.

They also have a special IPS mode that adjusts the display for better viewing outdoors. I have no idea if this is a gimmicky feature or one that adds to the user experience. It does use more power as one would expect.

It'll be tough for any Android tablet, as you say, because Fire OS and iOS for iPad are distinct OSes with their ecosystem that doesn't lend much room for any proper Android tablet, but I think if anyone has a chance ion merit alone t's Asus as they've shown that tablet+Android doesn't need to mean cheap crap, even though it does cost $100 less then the comparable iPad.