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Axiotron Modbook Mac-based Tablet finally shipping

Those people who couldn’t wait for Apple to release an official Mac Tablet, and who instead pre-ordered Axiotron’s Modbook alternative, will be getting a New Year treat as the company announces the pen-based OS X portable is finally shipping.  We first wrote about the Modbook - basically an Apple MacBook Pro rebuilt with a Wacom touchscreen digitizer to make a tablet - almost a year ago today, but the $2,290 device suffered a number of delays prompting many potential customers to hit the refund button. 

 Axiotron Modbook finally shipping

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Written by Chris Davies on January 1st, 2008 with no comments.
Read more articles on MacBook Pro and Macworld Expo and Multi-Touch interface and tablet.

Upcoming MacBook ultraportable to have Solid-State Drive?

As far as I’m aware, our boy Vincent has never been described as psychic but with his trials of a 64GB Samsung SSD NAND drive in a MacBook Pro over at SlashGear it could be that he’s pre-empted Apple’s latest laptop move.  AppleInsider quote analyst Gene Munster who has highlighted the solid-state drive as a likely candidate for inclusion in a new addition to the MacBook range, possibly in the form of the subnotebook many have long suspected Cupertino of working on.

“We believe NAND Flash drive sizes have now reached capacities that Apple would consider large enough to include in a new MacBook model.  As a result, a new, smaller version of Apple’s MacBook, and possibly an entirely new product, is more likely to be launched at MacWorld in early January” Gene Munster, Analyst

Samsung 64GB SSD in MacBook Pro

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Written by Chris Davies on November 12th, 2007 with no comments.
Read more articles on Analyst and Apple and MacBook and MacBook Pro and SlashGear.

Automatic file transfers from iPhone to Mac

Like vanilla-flavored cheese I’m just plain stupid when it comes to programming, which is why I’m so impressed by TUAW’s Erica Sadun.  She’s come up with a really useful application designed to make file swapping and archiving simple; it sits on your Mac desktop and then grabs a copy of image files you send from your iPhone.

 File Catcher app for Mac & iPhone

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Written by Chris Davies on November 2nd, 2007 with no comments.
Read more articles on Apple iPhone and MacBook and MacBook Pro and Software.

Apple patent shape-shifting MultiTouch keyboard

Attempts to change the venerable keyboard are usually met with failure - despite promising claims of productivity benefits, there’s often too great a pay-off for users used to the traditional QWERTY ‘board - but if anyone can encourage us to upgrade, perhaps it’s Apple.  Their latest patent describes a MultiTouch surface particularly suitable for a MacBook (or a Mac Tablet, maybe?) which, thanks to a lifting framework of key-edges that presses underneath, can be both a smooth touchpad or a delineated keyboard.

 Apple MultiTouch keyboard patent

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Written by Chris Davies on October 31st, 2007 with no comments.
Read more articles on Apple and Apple Patents and MacBook and MacBook Pro.

Report: Apple Gains 29% Share of $$$ Notebooks

picture-48.jpgDrilling down into Apple’s (AAPL) recent string of boffo quarterly reports, analyst Toni Sacconaghi Jr. of Bernstein Research finds both strength and vulnerability in Steve Jobs’ relentless pursuit of high-margin computer sales.

In his second report since Bernstein initiated coverage of Apple (see here for the first one), Sacconaghi notes that:

  • Apple’s global PC market share has increased in 10 of the last 11 quarters,
  • unit sales have grown 28% or better in each of the last four quarters
  • U.S. notebook sales have been particularly strong, accounting for 47% of Apple’s Mac unit growth and 52% of its revenue in Apple’s most recent quarterly report.

But amid all that good news, he sees risks ahead for Apple investors. It’s tempting, he says, to look at Apple’s slim 3% slice of the global market for PCs and assume that Jobs can easily grow his Mac business at least two fold in the next five years or so — an assumption that helps explain the high multiples in Apple’s current share price.

But if you look at the high-priced markets Apple chooses to play in, says Sacconaghi, you see that it already has a surprisingly dominant market share — without much room for growth.

Take, for example, the market for the most expensive notebook computers. Dividing notebook price ranges into fifths, or quintiles as the statisticians call them, Apple already has a 29% share of the U.S. market for notebook computers in the highest quintile — up “stunningly,” notes Sacconaghi, from 8% three years ago. In the consumer and education market (i.e. excluding business computers), Apple share of the top quintile notebook market is nearly 46%.

While other PC makers have been lowering their average selling price, Apple has been steadily increasing its price premiums relative to the rest of the market — great for keeping profit margins high, but not so good for growing market share.

“Accordingly,” Sacconaghi concludes, “we believe Apple faces a trade-off in its Mac business over the next 2 - 3 years: either lower price (and margin percentage) to sustain share gains, or retain its current price premiums and face slowing unit growth.”

Below the fold, a graph from the Bernstein report showing the rapid growth in Apple’s share of the premium notebook market from 2000 to today.

Written by Philip Elmer-DeWitt on October 11th, 2007 with no comments.
Read more articles on AAPL and MacBook and MacBook Pro and Market Share and PowerBook and Steve Jobs.

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