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January 12th, 2010 by Lisa Francis

Daily News: 12/01

BBC – Complaints greet Google Nexus One phone
Google is being inundated with complaints about its Nexus One phone. The touchscreen smartphone was launched on 5 January and many people are unhappy with Google only responding to questions by email and are calling for it to set up phone-based support.

CBR – Intel unveils app store for netbooks
Intel has launched a beta version of its software application store, the Intel AppUp centre for netbook computers and four other Intel partners Acer, Asus, Dell and Samsung are collaborating with Intel to bring their apps to consumers.

Computerworld UK – Google Energy to trade electricity
Google continues to broaden it business focus, now seeking permission to buy and resell electricity.

The Financial Times (online) – Component shortages set to push up computer costs

The cost of assembling personal computers will rise this year for the first time in six years because of shortages in some key components, industry analysts have forecast.

IT PRO – Mandelson launches new IT courses for adults

New IT courses are set to give thousands of adults the computer skills they need, according to a new Government initiative.

September 3rd, 2009 by Chris Measures

The end of the PC?

Traditionally, hardware sales have been seen as the strongest indicator of the health of the IT economy. Back in gloomy March, Gartner predicted a whopping 12 per cent decline in PC sales in 2009 as businesses and consumers put off upgrades.

However recent figures from Intel are putting a rosier spin on things. It has raised its guidance for the rest of the year and believes the industry will sell as many computers in 2009 as 2008.

What this sunny prediction masks is a fundamental shift in the market. It used to be your computer choice was laptop or desktop. Now new categories like netbooks, tablets, ereaders, sub-notebooks and even mobile phones are the computing choice for a lot of people. Fine for chip makers like Intel, but a worry for traditional PC manufacturers as the lines blur between computing, mobile and consumer electronics. Sales this Christmas promise to be crucial – watch this space to see who the winners are.

July 8th, 2009 by Chris Measures

Chrome OS – will consumers join the Cloud?

With the dust settling on Google’s announcement of its first PC operating system there are two main areas that stand out.

Firstly, it is not the threat to Microsoft that commentators are trumpeting – Google is targeting the netbook market with Chrome OS. While this is growing (21 million units this year according to Gartner) it is less than 10 per cent of the estimated 278 million PCs sold. And a large chunk of netbooks already use Linux, around which Chrome is based. So there’s a fair dose of hype in the ‘this drops a bomb on Windows’ comments.

The interesting thing behind Chrome is how it aims to bring Linux and cloud computing into the mainstream. Consumers generally haven’t got involved with Linux (even Firefox has only 20 per cent of the browser market) and if Chrome is to succeed it’ll need to change that. As a lean, web-based OS it’ll also need to convince people that the Cloud is the best place to store their data and applications. These are the challenges Google has to overcome – time to focus its PR on consumers if Chrome is to take off.
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